Monday, 28 February 2011

Research

While making research for my college free brief assignment I found this interesting article. These tips will be very useful to embody my idea.



Shooting Against The Sun — 10 Tips On How To Shoot Against The Sun


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Shooting into the light has always been a challenging task. Whenever we capture any subject against the light.It shows up dark (high contrast) and when we shoot portraits, it gives the squint factor. There are 9 tips to alleviate some of the issues while shooting into the light.
  1. Safety comes first: Practice caution when shooting into the sun since the sun can burn your camera sensor and/or cause eye-damage if allowed through the lens for long durations (more than a few seconds).
  2. Use a small aperture: A small aperture reduce the size of light source and helps avoid blowing the highlights.  A small aperture gives you the starlight effect which shows up beautifully against the subject.
  3. Use Sun Flares: While sun flares are avoided most of the times, creative use of sun flares can render a dreamy look to the entire scene especially the portraits.
  4. Strong artificial light: A smaller aperture necessitates the use of extra lights. This helps compensate for the low light, to control the shadows and also to reduce the contrast in the entire scene.
  5. Shoot in the magic light: It is always recommended to shoot in the soft, angular light of the sunrise or sunset rather than the harsh, bright light of the afternoon sun. Also shooting during the main part of the day can pose limitations to the composition and perspective since the sun is high up in the sky. Magic light (when sunrise /sunset) is one of the best time to shoot against the sun.
  6. Use of GND filter: Use a GND (Graduated Neutral Density) filter which allows you to tone down brighter areas of the composition and help balance the overall light in the scene.
  7. Use of Light Meter: The old adage “prevention is better than cure” fits this scenario. You can’t compensate or correct bad light during post-processing. So measure and correct the light during the shoot.
  8. Use Spot Metering: If you do not have a light meter, try spot metering so that the camera exposes for the subject and not the overall light in the scene.
  9. Use of Reflector: Use a reflector to avoid underexposing the main subject and reflect some light on the face of the subject to control the shadows.
  10. Post-processing: Last but not the least, feel free to toy around with the image during the post-production to fine-tune the desired effect. With the new image editors the possibilities are countless. If you are shooting RAW, you have a lot of scope to recover the “Dynamic Range” i.e. the shadows (and the highlights). RAW may allow you to recover a DR from -2 EV to +2EV from the exposure. You can easily turn this into an HDR. Or you can selectively recover the shadow details.

Sunday, 27 February 2011

Life's go'es on

   "Silence is a friend who will never betray" Confucius








Saturday, 19 February 2011

Beauty

I think she is gorgeous. She looks amazing all the time.

Julia by Wee Khim for Style Singapore










Friday, 18 February 2011

blame it on the sun

For my free brief assignment in college I chosen to make a little fashion editorial on topic - blame it on the sun. The main idea is to take all the pictures against the sun light. I really like this effect. While doing research I found this editorial and I love it. It is my new inspiration for my project.

Melissa Tammerijn by Solve Sundsbo for Vogue Italia Feb 2011







Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Friday, 11 February 2011