View allAll Photos Tagged mixedlighting

Surbiton, Surrey.

November 2013

That's a normal-sized tyre on the ground. The gap in the distance through which the light shines is quite large enough to walk.

 

Another unusual view in the caves next to Bow-Fiddle rock.

Ameles spallanzania (Mantodea, Mantidae). Size: 20 mm.

 

Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Sigma 180/3.5 macro lens on tripod. Mixed light shots taken in the early evening shortly after sunset in Croatia. The subject was lit with a diffused flash at reduced power. Exposure data: f/9, 1/25 sec., ISO 100.

 

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Model - Paige Austin

 

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Bacillus rossius (Phasmatodea, Bacillidae) female in hiding posture. After two ways of taking whole-body photos I got closer with the MP-E65 lens and took this portrait at 2:1.

 

Mixed light shot: the insect was lit with a single diffused flash, the background by the sun.

 

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On Sunday 15 October 2023, His Royal Highness Prince Christian of Denmark turns 18. The Royal Palace, in collaboration with the country's municipalities, will invite up to 200 young people from the Commonwealth to participate in the celebration, as each of Denmark's municipalities as well as Greenland and the Faroe Islands will have the opportunity to select two 18-year-olds to participate in the gala. Ballerup chose these two young people, Jora and Tobias, because they wanted to send one of each gender, and two young people who contribute to local cultural life. Other municipalities chose to select the young people through applications, and still others chose a pure lottery.

Outdoor portrait photography using natural light and a studio flash with Aurore M. Model.

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Model: Kai Liu MMayhem #2806699

MUA: beauteme MMayhem #791482

 

Inspiration: Oleg Ti

 

Strobist info: 16" beauty dish (AB800) overhead to the left. AB800 with 10 degree grid directed at the grey background. Flashlight + snoot + pink gel directed at the bracelet.

 

This is not a composite. The red lines are not photoshopped in but a result of using both strobes (to freeze the model), continuous light (to illuminate the bracelet) and long exposure (while shaking the camera).

Taken in the African Exhibit at the California Academy of Science and balanced with a sunset photograph

  

Karissa Lynne

 

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These series of 3 photos from this year's PDN Photo Plus Expo were shot on three different rolls of film, all horribly underexposed, and all pushed 1 stop in development. Processing handled by Miller's Professional Imaging.

 

Your choices of film stock are:

 

Ektar 100, Portra 400, and Portra 800

 

Can you guess which one is which? ^__^

 

Hasselblad 500C + 80mm f/2.8 T*

Mixed lighting test including natural sunlight and electronic flash.

 

Model: Brad Candie.

Client: EAG

 

Yes I should have brought a floor mat to the studio, I know the plastic is distracting :(

 

©Patrick McCue 2013.

--All Rights Reserved--

Drummer Jon Kane

 

Strobist: Alien Bee B800 shot through 20∘grid at high front right of frame.

Alien Bee B1600 with indigo gel at high back left of frame

 

(texture "scarred granite")

 

Become a fan of Graphik Nature Studios on Facebook here.

Mixed light (ambient and AD400pro in a 85cm octa)

 

Model: @_san_drine_modele_

 

© Michel Vanaken 2022, All rights reserved.

See my DNA... - or - View On Black

 

A great idea can't be dimmed. Created in the days well before Photoshop, this image is how it looked in camera.

 

My original concept was created for an ad agency as the cover of a retail catalog, it's been my signature image for over 25 years. Friend and assistant Michael Bodycomb (now with the Frick Museum, New York) helped tremendously with the execution to final film.

 

Camera: Cambo 4x5

Lens: 90mm Caltar II @ f/90

Film: Ektachrome 100 4x5

Lighting: Mixed - incandescent and studio strobe

Homeward bound and headed back toward the city centre after a fun few hours along the foggy river. Hopefully more evenings like this to come as we head into autumn, the season of mists.

There should be a term for a photo taken by a device at a distance yet under one's control. I shall call it... an auto-portrait-y.

Orchis militaris

 

Photo taken with the Sigma 15/2.8 fisheye lens at ƒ/16.

A pleasant waterfall in the Allt na Drochaide burn, a tributary to the Water of Ruchill, Glen Artney.

 

This was the first, and so far only, time I've felt the urge to invert the tripod's centre-column and dangle the camera millimetres above the water. In the process, I discovered a bug with the Pentax K-1: if you use live-view upside-down, the image inverts itself correctly but all the settings controls (histogram, etc) do not. It's tricky enough wondering where the control dials have gone, let alone where the numbers they control are to be found on screen. D'oh!

Band: Composition Be

 

Strobist: One Alien Bee B1600 shot through 60" Photoflex umbrella at high left of frame.

 

Become a fan of Graphik Nature Studios on Facebook here.

A former Church of Scotland building, now sold for residential use pending conversion, and quite a well-known scene amongst landscape photographers with its undulating ground and strong lines and shapes.

 

It's still quite a peaceful place to be, too - near the East Neuk coast, surrounded by farmland even if it is just beside the A917 to St Andrews.

Shot in studio. With a mixture of lighting. Flash heads, and Halogen lighting.

There was also the use of a cardboard mask used on the Halogen lamp....

Chrysura dichroa (Hymenoptera, Chrysididae). Body length: 8 mm.

 

I took several shots of this spectacular insect to get a few usable pictures. Cuckoo wasps normally move a lot and never stop but they need warm air for the activity. Early in the morning may be the best period to shoot them, although small movements still presented.

The subject was lit with diffused flash while the background was natural. 8 handheld exposures stacked in Zerene Stacker, exposure data in the additional info.

 

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Hyla arborea (Anura, Hylidae).

 

Yet another wide angle attempt with Canon EOS 5DII + Sigma 15/2.8 EX fisheye lens. Cropped to the 85% of the original image and de-fished in PS. Find more photos in the comment!

 

Mixed light shot, settings: f/14, 1/30 sec., ISO 400. The foreground was lit by a diffused Speedlite, you can see the reflection of the softbox in the eye of the frog. Next time I will try to use extension tube to get closer.

 

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Platycerus caraboides (Coleoptera, Lucanidae) stag beetle couple mating on a beech twig.

 

Canon EOS 5D Mark II + MP-E65/2.8 + diffused Speedlite 270EX. Single handheld shot, settings: ƒ/10, 1/40 sec., ISO 320, 1.5x magnification. Slightly cropped picture.

 

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This is what passes for modern industry - when the township is cleared, the Forestry moves in with areas fenced-off for protection of commercial interests

Nikon N8008s

Nikkor AF 35-70mm zoom lens

Tiffen 52mm 81A Warming Filter

Kodak Portra 400

Jobo C-41 Press Kit

Epson V500

Some utterly beautiful woodland - west-coast birch and oak forestry on the way from carpark to Aoineadh Mor.

Photo by Max Eremine.

© 2013 All Rights Reserved.

Model: Candace Cherie

www.maxeremine.com

www.facebook.com/MaxEreminePhotography

 

Light Info: AB800 through beauty dish and continuous light. Both from camera left.

 

From a Photoshoot series

Artist Portrait

Musician Ian Cattell

www.iancattell.com

 

Strobist: One Alien Bee B1600 shot through 60" Photoflex umbrella at right of frame.

 

Become a fan of Graphik Nature Studios on Facebook here.

This is one of my favorite images from a photo shoot I did recently with a couple of friends. We had this shoot planned for several weeks. I had hoped for a bright, sunny, golden evening but instead what we got was an overcast sky on the brink of rain. We decided to make the most of it and I'm glad we did.

 

Lauren is a personal trainer and she wanted an image that highlighted the speed training she offers her clients by doing some shots with the parachute. I loved the idea.

 

This shot was from later in the shoot. The conditions were perfect but I knew it wouldn't last long at all as it was quickly getting dark.

 

I wanted a shallow depth of field and some motion in the image. I knew it would be a challenge but I composed this shot and then asked Lauren to run across this spot. I panned my camera as she ran by hoping I could press the shutter at the very moment she crossed the line so that the image was composed perfectly. This image was our very first attempt and it turned out great. No cropping or straightening needed. We actually tried several more to be sure we got the shot but our first attempt was the best.

 

Lauren was a real champ! She had an injured hip and was scheduled for surgery the next day. After assuring me that no further damage could be done to her hip she did several takes despite the pain.

 

To light this image I used a 48” octabox at camera right. It was angled at about 60 degrees inward. The one unique thing I did with this shot was to position the light a little lower and feathered the light slightly upward.

 

Typically, I would position my light higher and angle the light down but that usually results in a more distinct hot spot on the ground. There is nothing wrong with this but for this shot I didn’t want that. I wanted a nicely, more evenly lit subject and ground. Angling the light up, and positioning it farther away, was fairly effective at avoiding an overly harsh hot spot on the ground, but, ultimately, you can’t escape the physics of light. The ground was still a little brighter to the right. A graduated filter was sufficient at completely evening out the ground.

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