View allAll Photos Tagged mixedlighting
Not yet visible... whacking great cloud in the way... thought I'd take a photo of the clouds as they passed by.
Runied bulding by the roadside, out in the wilds of Perthshire at Sheriffmuir.
This is not a repost, but it is from an older shoot. Sorta pulled out all the stops for this one...which won't necessarily make "C" all that happy. It was still kinda fun though. The hair, the eyes, the vignette, the colors...everything is over the top.
Maybe C.americana ???
Late afternoon flash light + natural light field stack taken with 7dmk2 + reversed Hexanon40mm and some extension tubes.
19 shots at f8 ; v 0,6 s ; iso 200.Assembled in Zerenestacker
*Pictures taken in January.
Beautiful light capturing the soft bracken-covered crags on Birnam Hill.
The Highland Boundary Fault line runs almost immediately below the camera at this point - I first spotted it by how the ground dips in the saddle-shape planted with younger trees.
Mid-way between the 1:3 gradients of Hardknott pass and mere 1:4 gradients of Wrynose, there was some absolutely stunning weather - my favourite combination of bright sunlit foreground with filthy stormy dark rainclouds in the distance, an optical sensory overload of saturation and contrast.
Utterly beautiful.
And it rained...
Also in arty black&white.
Blog: What I Did On My Holidays.
Copyright (C) Tim Haynes 2015.
I fully understand that I am a philosophy freak and idiot.
I always see the philosophical wisdom in regular daily scenes just like the one here.
My friend told me there is totally nothing unusual in this. But I find great life lesson here. I would not tell the exact meaning with my own words,
I will leave it to your own interpretations. :o)
Have a great Monday and great week!
This is just repost of an old picture taken in the summer.
What is life?
Life is a messy scene with all the details and mixed lighting like what we see in the indoor public market.
Life is buying and selling all the time.
Life is like cooking food from raw to processed.
Life (in photographic terms) is shooting with JPEG in the wrong white balance and sadly with irreversible processing.
Life is everyday being one day closer to the end and that is the point when we can see Robin Williams again and listen to his wonderful jokes.
What is life looking like to you?
I just tried again the film simulation bracketing with my X-T1 and I have used Standard Provia, B&W with yellow filter and the Pro Negative High while I went shooting in Richmond Public Market.
Surprisingly I find the Pro Negative High film simulation is extremely good especially for indoor mixed lighting. What do you think?
If you happen to be a X camera user also, can you please give me your opinion about Pro Negative High?
Have a great evening!
人生是一場大買賣,買很多的希望,人脈,名聲 ; 出賣更多的自尊,自由,以至你的靈魂。
人生就像一卷電影錄像,在開始時,它有點像慢鏡頭,中年過後,它播放的速度越來越快,你正要尋找你的遙控器,調整播放速度,電影卻已然終結。
Fuji X-T1 camera
Fuji XF 23mm F1.4 lens
Spending most of my time in the Missionary Training Center, my photo opportunities consist mainly of early morning walks around the beautiful Provo LDS Temple. I'm not complaining, though.
It is always an interesting challenge to capture a subject in mixed lighting, in this case; sunrise, building lights, and fountain.
View the entire LDS Temples Set
View the Entire - Buildings/Architecture Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
A shot of Meyah lot with a mix of natural light coming through the window and strobe bounced off the ceiling. The white walls were a natural v-flat.
A mixed light shot with natural light behind the model, a reflector camera right to light the body, and a snoot on a Godox AD600 to light only the face. I wanted to retain as much of the sky and trees in the background so I exposes for the sky/trees and then illuminated the model.
Model: Kayja www.instagram.com/kayja_n_t/
The red velvet mite was found accidentally on this bunch of eggs of an unidentified moth (Geometridae?). Not sure what it was doing there but was still enough to do a decent stack. Handheld focus stack of 4 mixed light exposures.
Hindu Temple at the Batu Caves, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
This scene was a mixed light nightmare. The outside light was very blue and the incandescent light from inside was very yellow. I decided to use my SB25 on manual at 1/2 power and hope for the best.
A mixed light photo, i love the lean and the lighting. I enjoy shooting in rooms with natural light. Shot in Houston Texas.
Model: Meyah
Bolbelasmus unicornis (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae) male. Size: 11 mm.
This particular beetle is related to truffle fungi, imagos can be found in summer. As many rhinoceros-type beetles, males wear horns but females dont. They are crepuscular and often attracted by light.
These shots were taken handheld and lit by a softboxed flash from above. The background was exposed by natural light with slow shutter speed. More exif data available on the info page.
Bicycle cut-through behind the Trent Building (University of Nottingham), which allows cyclists to travel between Jubilee Avenue and East Drive without having to dismount.
19th January 2014 — GBR, Nottinghamshire
Kodak Professional Portra 160
Canon EOS-3
Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG HSM Art
#ABFAV_FAVOURITE_PLACES_THEME
There's an 80-mile stretch of sheer cliffs between Dieppe and Ètretat,, 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 Côte d'Albâtre (the Alabaster Coast).
Around Fécampit 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 Ètretat, .
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.
Ètretat, is a very pretty little place. As soon as you step onto the shingle 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 ñ 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...
With love to you and thank you for ALL your faves and comments, M, (* _ *)
For more of my other work or if you want to purchase, visit here: www.indigo2photography.com
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
This is a photo I took of a friend and fitness competitor, Jason.
This is actually a mixed lighting setup. I used a 48" PCB Octabox on a very low setting to help pop him off the background, redirect the angle of the light, even the lighting out and add a catch light into his eyes.
A view across Loch Assynt to the impressive formation of Inchnamph caves.
The 'Bone Caves' of Inchnadamph contain relics of Eurasian lynx, brown bear, Arctic fox, reindeer (dated to as long ago as 47,000 BP), the only evidence of polar bears so far found in Scotland, and human skeletons dated to the 3rd millennium BC.
Blog (long): Assynt
Cool blue: an HDR panorama of Loch Turret reservoir by night.
Total exposure time: 432s (K-1, 108s with pixel-shift).
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
The light of the world keeps shining
bright in the primal glow
bridging the living dust to dust
such a long, long way to go
Cloud glowing vibrant orange-red in the sunset over Rannoch Moor as the Earth's Shadow reflects in Lochan Beinn Chaorach
Protaetia angustata (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae)
Photographed in Croatia, southern Dalmatia near Dubrovnik. This species has several colour variations from purple through blue and green. Green specimens are the most common, this cherry is rather rare.
I used diffused flashlight to light the subject and natural light on the background.
"Man has gone out to explore other worlds and other civilizations without having explored his own labyrinth of dark passages and secret chambers, and without finding what lies behind doorways that he himself has sealed.”
― Stanisław Lem
Always lovely getting to make little spontaneous images like this.
Also just realizing the last few portraits have all been look off camera right. Whoops. Not at all intentional....
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
Get my Photoshop actions and Lightroom presets on Creative Market
Ray of Dark series feat. Tina Petrovskaya
© Alexander Kuzmin Photography
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 black and white.
Copyright (C) Tim Haynes 2015.
Shot in front of a hand painted wall depicting the World Famous Mysore Dasara Procession.
Lit with a combination of available light and Godox TT600 flash.
Rosalia alpina (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae) male sitting on a fallen trunk of a beech (Fagus sylvatica) in a mixed forest in North Hungary.
This is another shot taken with the Sigma 15mm ƒ/2.8 fisheye lens at its closest focusing point, but here no flash used for the foreground. The light conditions were rather lucky to be able to get such illumination.
Bigger size: