Remek T
DS215 Is there anybody out there?
Topic: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
The key word here is for me a SUBJECT. Not the lines themselves.
It's been a tough one. I wanted Lumpy the Heffalump to look out of the tunnel window, as if through a window, into the sun. At the same time, it was meant for the tunnel to be still lit inside by some "ambient" light, but the entrance to the tunnel was blocked by the camera and the lens. Lighting it from the camera directly would cause the first part of the tunnel much brighter than the middle. I did not want that. The ambient light was supposed to be much more even throughout the tunnel. Here goes...
...The Strobist info: "window" light coming from SB800 zoomed to 105mm, manual power 1/64th power, camera right into a reflector (closet doors). Fill light provided by SB900, zoomed to 24mm, manual power 1/64th power, below camera, facing it, into a reflector (a white pillow) toward the scene.
Practice photography at Daily Shoot. Learn to light at Strobist.
DS215 Is there anybody out there?
Topic: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
The key word here is for me a SUBJECT. Not the lines themselves.
It's been a tough one. I wanted Lumpy the Heffalump to look out of the tunnel window, as if through a window, into the sun. At the same time, it was meant for the tunnel to be still lit inside by some "ambient" light, but the entrance to the tunnel was blocked by the camera and the lens. Lighting it from the camera directly would cause the first part of the tunnel much brighter than the middle. I did not want that. The ambient light was supposed to be much more even throughout the tunnel. Here goes...
...The Strobist info: "window" light coming from SB800 zoomed to 105mm, manual power 1/64th power, camera right into a reflector (closet doors). Fill light provided by SB900, zoomed to 24mm, manual power 1/64th power, below camera, facing it, into a reflector (a white pillow) toward the scene.
Practice photography at Daily Shoot. Learn to light at Strobist.