Anyone know of any sites I can visit for a little guidance with
lighting?
TIA
Most of his photos in the photo galleries have "lighting diagrams" that
show how they were lit. Spending the money on his Studio Lighting book
is also not a bad idea. But there is a ton of free info to be had from
his website.
--
Carl Miller
cmi...@trellis.net
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Using: OUI 1.9.2 Pro from http://www.ouisoft.com
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 22:43:37 -0600, cmi...@trellis.net (Carl Miller)
wrote:
That's right, but there's so much more. And there are no hard and
fast rules, either. Fortunately there are lots of great books and
websites that have lighting diagrams to help in arranging lamps.
Actually hot lamps are great for digital photography, since you don't
have the critical color demands of color film to deal with (and that
usually means using flash). The most impressive glamour portraits of
all time were done by the great Hollywood photographers that used
hotlights exclusively, and with large format cameras. They'd use
upwards of five lights, and the settings and exposures were very
deliberate. I found a really interesting view on this type of
photography from buying the videotape "Hollywood Style" by Alexander
and also Hurrell's "Hollywood Portraits." These studies of classic
hollywood photography will really be an inspiration to achieve a
glamorous quality in your portraiture. Interestingly these were
almost entirely lit by fresnel spotlights, not big softboxes or
diffused light sources.
Average people off the street can't handle that type of lighting.
You've gotta deal with zits and wrinkles and everything. Plus, the
style looks out of date.
Yes, it looks out of date, that's true. Damn it, I love it so...
I understand what you are saying but consider,
A. they had to deal with zits and wrinkles back then, perhaps even more so
since they didn't have anti-zit drugs, botox, nor even face lifts. But
with 8x10, even 11x14 cameras and negs almost as dense as a sheet of metal
it was easy to retouch with a soft lead pencil, literally.
B. Out of style? what ever is out comes roaring back, you ain't gonna get
Hurrell in a shopping mall, with your average portrait hack shooting with
twin umbrellas giving puffy faces, other photogs doing the big soft light,
going to someone who can sculpt an image with light will offer a unique
image to those who appreciate and can afford to indulge.
This reply is echoed to the z-prophoto at yahoogroups.com