Posts Tagged ‘thursday tip’

Thursday Tip: 10 Cents Light Modifier

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

A light modifier does not have to cost you hundreds of dollars. For this shot, I used something that cost 10 cents…right out of my bag. It’s a piece of letter size paper.

A couple of weeks ago, while I was teaching a workshop in Kuala Lumpur, I tweeted for a photographers gathering at a Starbucks. Four of us showed up and we decided to have some fun strobing. Soon (the man in the picture) asked how TTL flashes work. I decided to do a live demo instead of talking about theories.

We talked about the common perception that we need expensive lighting equipment if we need to light properly. To disprove this misperception, I decided to work on this shot.

I bounced the flash onto a piece of paper and used that to create a soft and diffused main light. Why bounce? Well, I needed a larger light source. The bigger the light source, the more diffused the light is. The smaller the light source, the harsher the light. Just compare the light coming in through a 10’ x 10’ window with light from a spot light. Get my point?

By bouncing light from a piece of paper, I’ve made the tiny flash into a larger light source which produces a result that is similar to that of a small softbox.

Another flash was placed directly behind Soon to separate our subject from the dark background.

Big thanks to my VAL (voice activated lightstand), Mark Leo for helping out.


Thursday Tip: Managing Your CF Cards & Batteries

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

I travel with half a dozen of CF cards and another dozen of AA batteries in pack of fours. So I needed a system to keep track of the cards and batteries to distinguish the fresh from the used ones. With things happening at lightning speed at wedding shoots, formatting the wrong cards would be disastrous. Plugging in dead AA batteries to our flash at crucial moments can cause me to miss an important shot. So how do I keep track of them?

1. Get a Memory Card Wallet & some Battery Cases
I use
Think Tank Photo’s Pixel Rocket to carry all my cards, and translucent battery cases to store all my rechargeable batteries. The key is that I can see the cards and batteries clearly even at a glance. At a wedding, I have no time to waste.

2. Decide Your Code
For me, CF cards with the logo facing me are freshly formatted cards that are ready to go into my cameras. Used cards are flipped so that the white surface faces out.

For batteries, a pack with all four batteries arrange facing one direction are fresh packs. Used or dead packs will be arranged in a zig zag pattern. Now these are my visual codes. You can decide your own.

3. Backup & Format
Immediately after a shoot, the used CF cards are downloaded to three separate HDDs. Then the cards are formatted and put back into the wallet–with the logo facing out of course.

I find that depending on my memory alone is a dangerous approach, especially when it comes to shooting a wedding. So I fall back on a routine system to eliminate human errors and temporal amnesia that plagues busy photographers.

Thursday Tip: Use Social Media To Boost Your Business

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Get Started Before The Wedding
As soon as you sign a bride and groom to a contract, search them out on Facebook and “friend them.”  As their wedding approaches, connect with them on their “Wall,” and get them psyched by showing a few images you’ve recently made, or sharing some of your “wedding day tips” with them via their Wall.  Each time you interact with them, your interaction gets broadcast to their friends, and builds a network of people who know you.

Keep The Momentum Going Long After The Wedding
The day of the wedding change your status to “Shooting So and So’s wedding” and tell them you’ve done that when you arrive.  The night after their wedding, share one or two photos with them on Facebook, and get a short slide show up in a week or two. The personal connections and networking will go a long way to earning you good business with their friends.

This week’s tip is submitted by Justin Ide from Boston, Massachusetts,  the first winner of the Thursday Tips Think Tank Giveaway contest. Congratulations Justin! We’ll be sending you your Pixel Pocket Rocket by Think Tank Photo real soon.

If you’d like to join the contest and walk away with some Think Tank Photo gear, send your undeniably awesome tip to info@wedshooter.tv.

Thursday Tips + Think Tank Giveaway

Friday, December 11th, 2009

We Are Sharing The Love  This Holiday Season!
2009 is drawing to a close really fast, and as we count our blessings there is much to be thankful for. This is why we’d like to share the love with you! Do you have a useful tip that you would like to share? Send it to us (info@wedshooter.tv), and if it gets published on Thursday Tips we’ll send you a Pixel Pocket Rocket by Think Tank Photo. This nifty little CF card pouch stores up to 10 memory cards and comes with a business card holder for easy identification.

And  that’s not all. If your tip is the best of the lot,  you stand a chance to win an awesome Glass Taxi camera bag. It is a convertible backpack/ shoulder bag that will hold large lenses or a camera system. This compact marvel holds up to a 500mm f4 lens, 300mm f2.8 lens with SLR attached, or SLR with 70-200 attached with hood in position.

How This Works
Step 1: Send a tip to info@wedshooter.tv. Send 10 if you want to, we really don’t mind.
Step 2: The WedShooter.TV team reviews your tip, and find it undeniably awesome (and useful too).
Step 3: If selected, your tip gets published on Thursday Tips in the WedShooter.TV blog. And we’ll even mention your name (isn’t that nice?).
Step 4: We get in touch with you to get your mailing address, and ship the prize off to you.
Step 5: Show it off to your friends. If it fails to impress, tell them your name appeared on our undeniably awesome blog.

What Kind of Tips?
Anything related to photography is great. Share something that would make life easier for everyone. It could be a shooting technique, a post-processing method, or even a time management tip for all us busy wedding photographers. We really leave it up to you. So what are you waiting for? Start sending those tips right now!

Terms and conditions: By submitting your tip to info@wedshooter.tv, you agree to abide by the terms and conditions stated here. WedShooter.TV reserves the right to select and publish user-contributed material at its own discretion. Contributed articles will be published twice a month for three months, for a total of six user-contributed tips. One complimentary Pixel Pocket Rocket will be awarded for each tip published on the Thursday Tips section of the WedShooter.TV blog. At the end of the contest, the one best article out of the six published will earn the contributor the Glass Taxi camera bag. Decisions made on winners and featured contributions are final.

Thursday Tip: Balancing Flash Exposure with Ambient Light

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

I always approach a photograph step-by-step. In a situation I want the background to be featured nicely with my subject in the foreground, I make sure I get the exposure of the background correct.


Step 1: Expose for the background. In this case it is 1/100th of a second at f/2.8 and skyline of Perth, Australia looks perfect. I set the camera on manual exposure to lock down the exposure. The couple look pretty dark here but we’ll fix that in the next step.


Step 2: To illuminate the couple, I put in a fill flash on a SB800 with a EzyBox HotShoe Softbox. So the camera exposure which is 1/100th a second at f/2.8 takes care of the exposure of the background. The fill flash takes care of the exposure of the couple in the foreground.


Step 3: Shooting a very dark sky, I set the exposure is set to TTL -0.3. Still the couple turns out too hot or bright.


Step 4: To reduce the brightness, I decided to power down the flash to TTL -1.3. Camera is still set on 1/100th second at f/2.8

Voila! The exposure is spot on now. And this is how we create the shot.

Remember construct your shots step-by-step. Move to the next step only after you’ve got things right. If it didn’t look right, ask why? Why is it too bright? Why is it too dark? If it the background is too bright, we reduce exposure on the camera. If the foreground was too bright with fill flash, we reduce the power of the flash.

The temptation is to panic and change all the dials and settings on our camera and flash. However, if we do things step-by-step trouble shooting and constructing a photograph is a lot easier.