View allAll Photos Tagged mixedlighting
We've been doing a photo shoot for a clothing company based in Hungary - topic was autumn photo shoot. --> after the shoot, they said it will be on a winter magazine, so we should post process it to a little bit more snowy :))))
Sun was coming from behind for fill we've used a canon 580 EX II thru a white umbrella. Triggered with YN-622C.
part I - autumn version:
Winter at its finest - alternating phases of gorgeous bright sunshine juxtaposed with clouds of hail passing by in the darker distance.
Strathearn, south of Comrie.
Also in shiny colour.
Copyright (C) Tim Haynes 2015.
interestingness / may 05.07
white desk from IKEA
white iMac+keyboard+mouse+speakers from Apple
white cup from Starbucks
white HD from LaCie
white background from Flickr
white light from Canon
stickies reminder: 24 hours of Flickr (today)
strobist: 430ex by ST-E2 / manual (1/64)
flash behind iMac screen /
aimed at back of LCD /
Model - Paige Austin
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Some more severely underexposed New Portra 400 taken on the Hasselblad 500C. These images came the day following the FPP recording, when Lauren and I met up with Antonio Alvarez at the Impossible Project NYC Space and took an evening romp around Soho.
Hasselblad 500C + 80mm f/2.8 T*
1/125th @ f/3.2
New Portra 400 @ 3200
Pushed only 1 stop!
Thanks for viewing my image, if you’re interested in more images from Earl Adams Photography check out my website at www.earladamsphotography.com, and “Like” my photography page on Facebook at www.facebook.com/EarlAdams.Photography
Assignment: PCA 108 "Dusk or Dawn"
Date: June 6th - 13th, 2010
From: Davidk36
WIT - We took a spontaneous trip to a small local carnival that sets up here annually. I wanted a shot of the iconic ferris wheel and kept on the lookout for foreground elements that would work with it. I liked the ticket booth because it is also sort of iconic and because the variety of light sources underscored the carnival atmosphere.
I shot it in RAW with the exposure manually set at ISO 200 and 1/160. I think I was at f/2.8 but I'm not positive. I was using an old manual 50/1.7. It's my favorite 50 but the camera can't determine its aperture and, of course, I didn't make a note of it. It might have been f/2. The shutter speed was about the slowest I could go and still get bokeh instead of motion blur from the ferris wheel.
Post in LR included a little rotation, minor noise reduction, a slight increase in contrast, and some color correction. Then I ran it through DMU (which will explain the voting comments below.) Afterward, I decided to crop a little off the bottom as was suggested. I also brought it into photoshop to sharpen the letters on the sign which was done with a combination of high pass layers, a USM layer, and masks.
In retrospect, maybe bumping up the ISO and using a slightly smaller aperture would have save me the effort of sharpening the sign. Live and learn.
Having walked through beautiful woodland, emerging at the edge of the forestry one sees this dry-stone wall, crumbling in several places, and one's instant thought is "the perimeter is breached", seeing it for the attempt to delineate mankind's space from wilderness that it used to be. And one would be right. Nature's taken over again, subject to the forces of the Forestry Commission.
Blog: in search of purity.
Brad stopped by to pick up my roommate and i cajoled him into posing for a few shots for one of my homework assignments. Yes, this is what i do for homework.
Mixed lighting test including natural sunlight and electronic flash.
Model: Brad Candie.
The most impressive space in the Saadian Tombs, one of the most ornate rooms I saw during my stay in Marrakesh. I was somewhat surprised as this was as impressive a piece of Islamic Architecture as anything I saw at the the much more famous Alhambra in Granada, Spain.
From Wikipedia : "The Saadian tombs in Marrakech date back from the time of the sultan Ahmad al-Mansur (1578-1603). The tombs were only recently discovered (in 1917) and were restored by the Beaux-arts service. The tombs have, because of the beauty of their decoration, been a major attraction for visitors of Marrakech.
The mausoleum comprises the corpses of about sixty members of the Saadi Dynasty that originated in the valley of the Draa River. Among the graves are those of Ahmad al-Mansur and his family. The building is composed of three rooms. The most famous is the room with the twelve columns. This room contains the grave of the son of the sultan's son Ahmad al-Mansur. The stele is in finely worked cedar wood and stucco work. The monuments are made of Italian Carrara marble. Outside the building is a garden and the graves of soldiers and servants."
SET OF 10 images.
We drove to Étretat, in Normandy.
There's an 80-mile stretch of sheer cliffs between Dieppe and Étretat, in upper Normandy, mirrored by those of the English coast of Dover, pointing to their shared geological origin, no other section of the French coast resembles the unique breathtaking seascape of La Côte d'Albâtre (the Alabaster Coast).
Around Fécamp it also goes by the poetic name of le Pays des Hautes Falaises (high cliff country) filled with the flavour of salty air and the shrieks of aerobatic gliding gulls.
This part of France, called Le Pays de Caux (chaux=chalk), attracted many a famous painter and writer, like Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, Samuel Beckett, in the 19th century, especially the Impressionists namely Courbet and Monet, who were captivated by its ever-changing light.
The poet Guy de Maupassant spent most of his childhood in Étretat .
Although Alabaster seems to be the most appropriate name because of the chalky whiteness of the cliffs, closer examination reveals black and ochre flint, also salty rust...as you see here!
From the low nestled town and beach, you can see two natural arches and the pointed "needle", they are the Porte d'Aval, and the Porte d'Amont.
Étretat is a very pretty little place. As soon as you step onto the chingle beach you'll see the cliff formations to either side. To the west, on the Falaise d'Aval, a straightforward if precarious walk leads up the crumbling side of the cliff, with lush lawns and pastures to the inland side, to the point where the turf abruptly stops, occasionally ripped by the latest fall of cliff.
From the windswept top you can see further cliffs, it was at times somewhat hazy.
The Falaise d'Amont is on its eastern side – which Maupassant compared to an elephant dipping its trunk into the ocean – are what stick in the memory.
The cliff itself presents an idyllic rural scene, with a gentle (ahem, STEEP) footpath winding up the green hillside to the little chapel of Notre-Dame, from where you have a spectacular view.
In the evening, after a meal, we were treated with a fabulous sunset and the lighting on The Door and Needle of La Falaise d'Amont...
Lead and enjoy a good life, do and say things that enrich... and do not forget to tell the people close to you, how much you love them!
With love to you and thank you for ALL your faves and comments, M, (* _ *)
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
WHAT PART of DO NOT USE is it that you DO NOT UNDERSTAND?
I find my images on numerous blogs and websites EVERY DAY, without my permission!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Why not view the set as a slide-show?
Also I often upload more than one image at the same time, I see a tendency to only view the last uploaded...
A relaxed and perky Pixy in my "studio" late last year. He was on top of a scatching post located next to a window which provided the light on his left, while reflected off camera flash lit his right side.
Today I found this previously ignored image and edited it using my recently acquired Photoshop program and knowledge.
Thanks for viewing my image, if you’re interested in more images from Earl Adams Photography check out my website at www.earladamsphotography.com, and “Like” my photography page on Facebook at www.facebook.com/EarlAdams.Photography
Nikon N8008s
Nikkor AF 35-70mm zoom lens
Tiffen 52mm 81A Warming Filter
Kodak Portra 400
Jobo C-41 Press Kit
Epson V500
Three of my favourite old Scots Pine trees in the Caledonian Forest reserve, looking toward Sgurr na Lapaich in the distance.
Blog: Glen Affric.
Copyright (C) Tim Haynes 2015.
Timarcha goettingensis Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae) male. Body length: 12 mm.
In Hungary, we can find two early spring beetles with similar appearance. This leaf beetle reminds us a blue oil beetle. For the comparison go to the comment section! They both emit poisonous drops to keep away predators.