Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Double-Fold Umbrella Blues

The super-handy, 43" Westcott double-fold umbrellas appear to be missing in action at Adorama. If anyone knows where we can get them, please leave a link in the comment section and I will update the umbrella links throughout the site.

I sure hope they are not gone for good. I will ping Adorama to see what's up.

UPDATE: Well, from asking around (and from the very helpful comments) it appears as though the site could have possibly caused a, uh, wee bit of a run on a few products which normally do not move in great numbers. For those of you who do not read the comments sections, we have found out the following:

1) The umbrellas are not discontinued.
2) You can get them - catch as catch can - in several other locations, including:

Samy's
Roberts Imaging
Penn Camera

I will post a note (or anyone feel free to chime in) when I see them back in stock at Adorama, too.

On Assignment: Soccer Preview Shot

First of all, I would like to note how unfair it is that some people get to have the Eiffel Tower as a backdrop in their dusk shots and I have to settle for nondescript Lake Elkhorn in sleepy little Columbia, MD.

That said, many of you saw this when it was posted in the Flickr Strobist group pool by London-based photographer Ant Upton. Ant was kind enough to answer my e-mail and send me some detail and outtakes on his Paris shoot.

Before you get into the article, here are some important points to remember.

• Notice how Ant tests his ideas and nails down whatever variables he can before the actual shoot.

• And just as important, see how he sticks with his pre-tested idea during the shoot until he gets what he wants.

The difference between a good shooter and a mediocre one - especially when it comes to pulling off a lighting concept - is testing and persistence. You want to be ready and willing to do both in the quest for a cool shot. Give water enough time, and it will always find a path downhill. You want to be water, and your ideal picture is at the bottom of the hill.

Beyond that, extra credit goes to shooters who, having reached the "bottom of the hill," keep working the job with low-odds, high-payoff picture attempts. You already have your shot. It's not like they are going to take it away from you. You can even see it on your TFT screen. Now is not the time to walk away. It is the time to aim high for a truly killer shot. There's no risk - "good enough" is already in the bank.

Enough of my drivel. Here's Ant. For clarity, his (paraphrased) stuff is in "block quotes," which are the inset paragraphs. Mine paragraphs are not inset. Also, the italicized notes within Ant's inset graphs are mine.

The photos were taken in preparation of the UEFA Champions League final to be held in Paris and my client needed photos to help publicise their involvement with the tournament through a competition. Preparation and Planning prevent piss-poor performance. With this in mind we did a map recce ( reconnaissance) of Paris to work out where to do the photography from to place the sunrise behind the Eiffel Tower, which was one of the landmarks chosen to place the footballer in Paris.

Having worked out the azimuth and done the map recce, I decided a couple of bridges over the Seine would provide the clearest view of the Tower with the sunrise behind it. With no buildings in the way to mess up the skyline, Bir Hakeim Bridge proved to be the most suitable once we had reviewed the test shot. We had one of the clients jumping up on a plinth in place of the competition winner who would be actually kicking the ball.

After a fitful night's sleep, my two alarms (smart guy) went off at 4am in the hotel room. The client and I made our way to the Bridge. We wished to be in place at least half an hour before the estimated time of the sunrise. This would allow us plenty of time to set up the lights, practice the ball kicking and generally not have to rush. It is always better to get the things you can control right (before you start shooting) so that you are able to react to the things you can't control, either by changing your plans to minimise the impact or sometimes changing you photo direction totally to take advantage of a new set of opportunities.


(Well, now we know how Ant pulled this off in Paris without having to wade through layers of bureaucracy. That's a pre-sunrise shot. You get up at 4:00am, and you can get away with darn near anything.)

On the bridge I started setting up the lighting and working out my position. (Questions: Should I use a wide angle lens and have the footballer big in the frame using perspective? Or have a more realistic rendition using a more normal focal length?)

I used a 580 EX Canon flash. I had decided was going to be triggered by the ST2E, which fires the remote flash gun by infrared signal. This would also give me control of the flash's power level from my camera position without having to run back and forth adjusting the flash power to balance with the ambient as the sun rose. It soon became obvious that whilst the range of the ST2E indoors is pretty good, outdoors it often just didn't fire due to the distance I wanted to stand at from the flash head.

So out came the trusty Pocket Wizards, which always work. But I did lose the ability to control the flash from the camera position. A quick explanation to the client who was going to be the 'walking light stand' about how to change the power of the flash and we were ready to go.


There goes Ant, stealing a future "On Assignment" from me. I use "carbon-based light stands" all the time. I usually only take two light stands with me, assuming I can offer some bystander/client/assistant a total immersion experience in the world of location-lit photography without charging them a dime... :)

Here's an example of what Ant is talking about, from another location in the same shoot. If you aren't making use of people this way, you really have to ask yourself why not.

After a safety briefing to the winner ("Don't fall in to the river!") and a few practice kicks, the footballer was helped up onto the plinth which formed part of the wall of the bridge. We started shooting with the client acting as a mobile light stand holding the 580 EX flash.

The main problems we encountered were shadows cast either by the ball onto the footballer or the flash being pointed in the wrong direction.

The latter is one of trade-offs of using a human light stand. It is easy to move the position of the light. But the flash may just not be pointed in the right direction. The other was loosing two of our three footballs into the river, however I was starting to see some images I was pleased with.


Here's an idea. Rubberband a straw or small cardboard tube to the top of your flash, so your "human light stand" can use it as a scope to aim the flash at the subject's face. This works 100% of the time - even when the subject is moving around.

After about half an hour of shooting, adjusting the exposure of both the flash and the camera to take account of the changing light as the sun rose, we felt we had covered the job as per the brief. After the client gave a quick check on the back of the camera, we moved onto the daylight shots. On the whole were pretty simple. Although we did still use off-camera fill in flash to give the subject better modeling rather than straight on camera fill in flash.


(Note: See the "person-holding flash" shot, above, for this location.)


Thanks from all of us, Ant. For the photo, the outtakes and especially the info.


NOTE: Click on the image at top (or here) for a larger version.

All photos ©Ant Upton

Next: Robert McNary: Shoot Your Kid

Gear:

Camera: Canon EOS 1D/Mk 2, on manual exposure
Flash: Canon EX580 on ETTL 2 exposure and on manual
Trigger: Canon ST-E2 IR transmitter
Also, Pocket Wizard remotes
Lenses: Canon 24-70; Sigma 12-24 wide angle zooms.

Monday, June 5, 2006

Google. Gotta Love 'Em.

Been getting reports that some people are having problems loading pix from the blog. Turns out it is an (intermittant) Google server error. Sigh. Refreshing the page will frequently solve the problem. It is apparently happening to many other blogs, too.

Heck, it's not like I need photos to do a lighting blog, right?

On a brighter note, I just finished a shoot that yielded a very cool photo. It's the conceptual photo I built the macro strip lights for. Tried them out, and ended up using snoots instead for more control. (I did get some mileage out of the strip lights with the lacrosse player, and I will use them again. So no big loss.)

As always, I have to wait until The Sun publishes to put it up, but I am very happy with the result and cannot wait to publish both the photo and the how-to.

In the on-deck circle is an On Assignment from that cool sunset/soccer/Eiffel Tower shot that was posted here, in Flickr's Strobist group. There's lots of detailed info on the shooting and conceptual process, and more photos from the shoot tha show the evolution of the idea. That kind of stuff is always very important to see. I am working on the copy now.

-D

Sunday, June 4, 2006

Advertise on Strobist

Strobist is in the process of shifting from a keyword/text-link advertising model to a more standard display ad model. As such, the opportunity exists for sponsorship in a variety of different locations. The block diagram at left shows the various ad placements that will be available throughout the site.

(The average article is longer than the block diagram suggests, yielding a higher editorial:ad ratio than shown.)

Strobist can help you reach a fast-growing audience of enthusiastic photographers who are actively working to grow their skills and capabilities. Strobist's readers are clustered primarily in the USA, Western Europe and Southeast Asia.

Strobist offers high visibility and approximately 300,000 page views a month on a unique site that is packed with original editorial content and real-world lighting tutorials.

Display rates start as low as $0.48/CPM.

Ad blocks on the new site will include:
• Leaderboard: 660w x 90h ($4.50 CPM; Avail 9/06.)
• Between mainbar stories; 400w x 90h (Avail; $1.55 CPM.)
• Sidebar, above the fold: 220w x 60h (Avail; $0.75 CPM.)
• Sidebar, below the fold: 220w x 60h (Avail; $0.58 CPM.)
• Sidebar, modular/stackable: 220w x 60h (Avail; $0.48 CPM per unit)
• Footer: 660w x 90h (Avail; $1.15 CPM)

Please e-mail with questions, or for more info.



Back to Strobist's home page.

Saturday, June 3, 2006

Strobist Off-Camera Flash Boot Camp: More Details

I have been thinking long and hard about the format (and assignment content) for Strobist's first-ever version of summer school. And I think I have something pretty fun lined up for you guys.

There will be six assignments. Each will be very realistic, with real-world problems and opportunities. The assignments will all center on specific (and very accessible) subjects, each to be shot with a specific technique. We will mostly be shooting people.

Yes, I realize that art schools tend to tell you to light something inanimate, like an egg. (Booor-ing, Sidney.) But lighting and shooting a person has its own special challenges. And besides, this ain't no art school.

Further, if you can light a person you can light an egg. Not so, the reverse.

The first assignment will be deceptively easy - it is designed to let a publication test-drive your level of ability and committment to your craft without taking much of a risk. The jobs will quickly progress to more challenging assignments just as they would in the real world - provided you had been nailing the easy stuff.

You will have to declare (in you photo tags) whether you are a pro or an amateur. For the purposes of this series, anyone who earns more than 10% of their income shooting photos is a pro. We'll be on the honor system - but I want people to be able to compare work within their own class.

If this works out well, by the end of the course you will be able to rely on a new bag of techniques. Beyond that, you will see what dozens - possibly many dozens - of shooters from around the world did with your exact same assignment. That is very valuable stuff. If you are building a portfolio, the assignments will likely produce a couple of new entries for you.

And if any of you photo students are out there interning for the summer, I hope you'll play along, too. The assignments may prompt you to shoot some cool stuff on assignment for your respective publications.

I am very psyched about the series, and I hope word of it spreads before the fact. I am pretty sure word will get out after it starts, as I do not think anyone has done something like this online before. But the more people we have participating from the very start, the better it will be for all.

Friday, June 2, 2006

Not Hacked, Just Pushing

Last night we pushed out a bunch of new features, and apparently tricked the online world into thinking we were hacked with our down page message. Sorry if we scared you, we often forget how closely everyone is watching our little 32 person company. So bad spelling and jokes aside, here are the new features we pushed out last night.


Channels:

We think our users provide some of the most entertaining content in the world, and we're working to continuously develop new and exciting ways for you to broadcast yourself. What better way to do that than to give every user the ability to become their own channel? Now all content creators and collectors, be it professional filmmakers, videobloggers or just people who love chihuahuas can broadcast videos from their channel for all the world to see. You can visit our Channels tab to check out YouTube's most subscribed channels, or simply go to your profile to start creating and customizing your own channel. Here are just some of the new features included in channels:

  • Color customization: make your channel look as cool or as ugly as you like.

  • Video Log: showcase and discuss videos (yours or others) on your Channel

  • Channels I'm watching: check out what channels other users are subscribed and find great new content



  • Blog It:

    You can now post videos directly to Blogger, BlogSpot and LiveJournal (and we'll be adding support for more blogs soon). Once you set up your blog options, just click the 'blog it' button when watching any video - and voila! your blog entry is created.



    Viewing History

    Many of our users have been asking for this feature, so we've created a viewing history log of the last 100 videos you've watched. We absolutely respect your privacy and do not store any of this information on our servers. You can also clear your viewing history at any time by clicking the 'clear viewing history' at the bottom of the page.



    That's all for now, but check back often - we've got a bunch more features coming out very soon! And remember to send me an email with your thoughts, feedback and any other new features you'd like to see.



    With Love,

    Maryrose

    The YouTube Team

    Thursday, June 1, 2006

    Free, Custom Backdrops Delivered Daily: How to Shoot Flash Into a Sunset

    Pop Quiz: Within a five-minute margin of error, how many people here know when the sun is going to set in your town tomorrow?

    If you don't know that information, you should. You should also know roughly where the sun will set. The sunset's apparent location changes throughout the year - probably more than you think. The time changes all year, too. I make it a point to check the paper once a week or so, to keep the time trend line stuck in my brain.

    Along with those two tidbits, knowing a couple of accessible shooting locations that will give you a nice view of the sunset is handy, too.

    Why? Because any day of the year, you have a easy photo shoot just waiting in your pocket. Knowing how to do this is a bread-and-butter skill for any aspiring flasher, so we are going to go through it step by step. Hey, no one ever accused me of being too brief.

    The best locations are the tops of hills which give you a view of the sky in the east and the west. Why? Because you are going to shoot a very good fall-back portrait just before the sun goes down at all. Then, just 20 minutes later, you are going to knock it right off of the page with a better version.

    Here's the scoop.

    Having your pre-arranged location and time ready, you plan to meet your subject about 20 minutes before sunset. Tell them to expect to take about an hour. Assuming your subject is punctual, they are going to arrive just in time to shoot a nice, easy golden light (and "available" light, at that) portrait. One hour, one location, two very good (and totally different) looks.

    In this example, I was shooting a portrait of some family friends on Monday as a small thank you for the "totally wicked" clothes (that's my seven-year-old girl's extremely positive term) that they passed down to her. Seems that their Sarah (that's her in the photo) who is a couple of years older than my Emily, has "like, the totally coolest" taste in clothing. She's practically her own designer label for my daughter now.

    As an aside to the aside, please try to get in the habit of shooting nice photos of your friends whenever possible. Use light. It's great practice for you, wonderful pictures for them and it's darn near free. It's all ones and zeroes - just shoot them on digital and burn them a disc. You can output photos at a drug store for pennies a print now. It's good karma, and you learn in a no-pressure environment.

    Back to the pictures.

    So, you shoot the easy, golden light available light stuff. It's low, warm and beautiful. Most people would be happy to turn it in, but you have moved on to the next level now. So this is your fallback in case the good stuff goes wrong.

    Available light stuff shot, you relax and watch the sunset. I have heard that there is similarly good light to be had each morning. But I would not know about that, as it happens long before I wake up.

    When the sun drops below the horizon, it's back to work for you. Choose your background angle (uh, think "west") and your camera position. You will probably want to shoot from a low angle to exploit the afterglow.

    Set up your main light, probably off to one side at ~45 degrees and up a little. Umbrellas or softboxes work well for this one, although you can hard light (or snoot) it, too. Let your subject matter and desired effect guide you.

    If you are using a second light, set it up, too. I usually like to cross light with the main, with a hard light source dialed way down. Do not forget to gobo the back/side light to control glare.

    From here on out, the sequence and exposures are designed to maximize your shooting time. This is not the only way to do it, but I like to work this way to squeeze out about 20 minutes of shooting time.

    First, set your ASA to the lowest limit, and set your shutter to your maximum synch speed. Now set your front light to full power. This will let you get started as soon as possible. The back (cross) strobe light, if used, will be dialed down quite a bit. And for the sake of simplicity, I am going to proceed as if we are just using a front light. If you can do one, you can do two. But start with one.

    OK, your shutter speed is on max synch. Synch up the flash - off camera, Bucko - and do a test shot of your hand at what will be your subject's position. Shoot it with the flash at full flash power. If you are using a small flash and diffusing it with an umbrella or whatever, you will still need to be pretty close to your light. Adjust your aperture and test to find out what the correct aperture will be for a full power flash. The background will be overexposed at this point. No problem.

    Let's say ends up being f/5.6, just for argument. So now you have a shutter speed and an aperture. When the exposure for the afterglow drops to that exposure, you can begin shooting. The light will not last very long, so you'll want to milk it for all of the time you can get.

    NOTE: There will still be enough light when your shooting window opens to easily focus on your subject. But it will drop pretty quickly, and you can extend your shooting time by bringing a flashlight to aim at your subject periodically to aid focusing. Good for finding gear after dark, too. Just a thought.


    Once your shooting window opens, your ambient light will change pretty quickly. And you have a couple of options on dealing with it. First, you can simply open up your shutter speed to balance the ambient as it dims. Remember to vary your shutter speed when shooting, too. There is no "right" exposure. Moving the shutter speed will over- or under-expose the background. Airy, normal or dramatic. It's personal choice and all available to you moment to moment.

    If you have an external high voltage battery pack, long recycle times will not be an issue. But if you are running AA's, you will want to drop to half (maybe even quarter) power on the flash as soon as the ambient light level will let you. It sounds like a complicated dance, but it is very intuitive with the TFT screen on the back. I easily shot four individual people and then the group of four in about a ten-minute window.

    You may wish to practice one evening with hard light, as it will be stronger and give you a longer shooting window. The first or second time you do this, you will probably find yourself bogged down by trying to remember the details as the light changes. But keep at it - it gets smooth and effortless with practice. And the ability to do this any evening is a valuable skill.

    As the light drops, power your flash down (on manual, of course) until you get to your lowest practical working aperture. Then you will start lowering your shutter speeds as the light drops further. Move the camera during the exposure. Experiment with subject movement. You will already have some good stuff in the can, so use the last part of the light to stretch for something really cool. I have made some nice shots at one-second (and longer) exposures on sunset shoots.

    Just remember the shutter will affect the background. The aperture will affect background and the subject. Adjusting the flash's output will affect just the subject. Raising the ASA a little will buy you a few more minutes of shooting. Total control at your fingertips. Go wild.

    Save a little bit of light to collect gear by. Or bring a flashlight. No sense in leaving some passerby a free lens the next day, right?

    Kids, athletes, businessmen - whatever. Just about anyone looks good against a sunset's afterglow. Just stick a little shoe-mount flash off to the side and they'll look like a Fortune Magazine cover.

    And the custom-made, one of a kind backdrops are totally free.

    Next: Ant Upton: Soccer Preview Shot

    Photos ©David Hobby