View allAll Photos Tagged SetUp,
setup for my Zulu shot,high left Vivitar 285HV @ 1/4 pwr, right fill Vivitar 285HV @ 1/16 pwr and I held a white reflector up near the front of the headset for some fill on the bottom of it.
Venue Setup. Boxing, Woodstock Reverve Fight For Life Charity Boxing Event. Trusts Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand. Saturday 3rd December 2011. Photo: Anthony Au-Yeung / photosport.co.nz
The setup shot for my Christmas "card".
Since I don't own PWs I had to shoot in bulb mode and fire the SB28 twice to get the "best" lighting. Camera on the tripod, close the basement door, don't trip over the tripod, locate the release on the camera. Then pickup the flash, press the shutter release, find the test button on the flash and fire it, move the arm to a different location and fire the flash again. Repeat until photo is good enough.
This setup shot was taken using the on-camera flash...
Super setup. En af Risteriets (meget) gode kunder har sendt os et foto af hjemme set-up'et .. lækkert!
The camera's insured and the house is rented. The bare wires on the lights in the fan were the part I was most worried about, so I didn't touch them very many times. And NEVER on purpose. Stay in school, kids.
This is the setup for this noise. The giant version of this photo is here if you want to investigate the clamps. CLAMPS!
Setup: cactus v4 trigger for flash,a white board and a white sheet of paper for background, a blue gelatine for color's background
Excuse the mess, we were doing a pre setup before an upcoming show to get a general idea of how things are gonna flow. we like this setup a lot, we are able to put more product out
Setup for this shot
Camera left: ABR800 at full-blast with umbrella adapter shooting into a convertible umbrella, bounced onto a white bedsheet for a queen-size mattress...back left 430EX2 snooted at 1/8 and back right FL50 bare at 1/4 power. Fired by PW2's.
Venue Setup. Boxing, Woodstock Reverve Fight For Life Charity Boxing Event. Trusts Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand. Saturday 3rd December 2011. Photo: Anthony Au-Yeung / photosport.co.nz
this is the setup for the "light painted" Rolling Rock bottle.
Stool, messy basement, LED flashlight, iPad (with Lightpainting app for the band green shapes)
Setup for a photo of my sister
On the left you can see one flash bounced off the wall, and one aimed straight at her. You can also see the tripod, i.e. camera position.
Setup shot for Day 130.
Strobist info:
1 SB800 with DIY gridspot camera left behind subject. Unomat 300W continuous video light shot thru an umbrella as the main light.
Setup shot for the ice whisky shot.
SB-800 is at camera right. SB-25 is at camera left. The light box is an essentially free, homemade job, instructions for which can be found at Strobist.
This is just one setup I used. Moving the reflector (aka foil-covered cardboard) around changed the highlights.
Vivitar 285HV is at 1/16 power.
Setup shot for "Wabbit Hunting" series
see finished shots here:
flickr.com/photos/5ftgiants/2719562876/
YN460 wearing my ghetto snoot with a pinhole shround on the end to get a more focused light. Gels just got taped over the end of the snoot. Mounted on a V2 trigger (hot shoe) and then on a Slik DV tripod.
SB 28 is wearing a 1/2CTO gel and a bounce reflector for fill and highlights on the chrome bits. mounted to a V2 trigger (hotshoe) and then onto a gorilla pod SLR.
Guitar is supported by a manly guitar stand. Guitar stand is loaded with manly beverages... for later.
Nikon D80 mounted on a manfrotto ball head tripod.... looking low to high.
My only consideration was getting the full headstock and 4 frets into frame, lucky for me as I had very little room to move further back with the d80 before I either got a frame half full of ghetto snoot, or I backed into the wall of this tiny room.
Journaling:
* Buy an easy set up pool despite your husband’s warnings. The box says 15 minute set-up, so how hard can it be?
* After purchasing, read directions. *Realize it is going to take much more than 15 minutes to set up.
* Realize just how un-level your yard is.
* Go ahead and take pool out of box.
* See that the power source is not going to work.
* Discover that you are going to have to dig a ditch for a new power source to be set up.
* Reconsider the whole thing. Call the store to see if they will take it back. They will only take it if it will all fit back in the box.
* Try folding up the pool and stuffing it back into the box.
* Try this tirelessly until everyone has smashed and laid on the pool trying to get it back into the box the way it came.
* Discover it will NEVER fit back in the box despite how hard you try.
* Borrow a tiller. Till, rake, till, rake, till, rake until you have blisters on your hands.
* Then bring in the big help……..
AKA my dad
* Bring in a truckload of washed sand and re-level and put in the proper power source so no one gets electrocuted when plugging in the filter. (Thanks to Mr. Miller!)
* Finally set up the pool and start filling. * Answer the question, “”is it ready yet?”” 3 million times.
The end result?
3 Very Happy Kids
Supplies:
Junkitz PP
Bazzill CS
EK Success Tag Type Letter Stickers
Creative Imaginations - Twanger Foam Stamps
Big Honkin Letter Stickers
MM Paint - Spotlight
MM Eyelets
2 Peas Fancy Free Font
Edges inked with black ink
My new outdoor Strobist gear/setup
(3) Yongnuo YN560 lll Speedlight/Flashes
(2) Flashpoint 40" Black/White Convertible Umbrellas
(1) Pixco Mimi Softbox for Speedlights/Flashes
(3) Flash/Umbrella Brackets from flashzebra.com
(2) Linco 10' Light Stands
(1) Linco Boom Stand
(3) Linco Sandbags (Not Pictured because of being in back of van)
All Speedlights/Flashes being fired by Yongnuo RF-602 triggers
Note: This setup was for example purposes only, Not how it will be setup for outdoor photo sessions.
Thanks Kurbster