Update:
This morning I went to The Flash Centre and agreed to hire an Elinchrom BXRi 2x500 kit.![]()
Bad points:
There are always drama queens who refuse to change their pose, who say that all photos of them are 'disgusting', that sort of thing. Very frustrating.



The exposures look spot on for me, a little PP sharpen for screen/print and these will be just fine.
Just one point, was there a reason for shooting at iso200?
Good thread and an example to all togs wanting advice.
dunno bout a k7 but its native on my 5d2
Yipee !
Good gear mate - you pulled off a job and came away smelling of roses.
Your lighting is nice.
You made good decisions.
Well played.
I hope you are now Mr confident to do it (or something more adventurous) again.
I say you should snowball your self and QUICKLY invent a project:
A nightclub studio / a corner of a busy street studio / a next to the ice cream van studio / outside the local cop shop studio (tricky but worth it for the people and pictures you'll get).
Do daylight next time and invite people into your two large pieces of polystyrene set up in the most unthinkable place on your local high street.
Two big flats make a studio. Or (as you've just learned) one curtain.
i.e. - quick pat on the back for yourself but don't stop there...
Best wishes
Monty
Interesting. The left light was more than a stop dimmer than the right light, and shot through an umbrella as far away from the head and as close to the subjects as possible, which was how I understood the fill light to have to be set up, but I guess the other (reflective) umbrella wasn't as reflective as it ought to have been! Whatever, it workedGarry Edwards said:What you've got here isn't actually 1 key light and 1 fill light, it's 2 key lights. The only possible improvement would have been to have both lights at the same effective power, which is the norm for this type of shot.
Yes - something somewhere in C.Fn is set so that I couldn't access ISO 100, so I didn't bother trying and just enjoyed the extra DoF. I could have done it, I guess, but I don't think there's any noise at 200 on the K-7.tiler65 said:Just one point, was there a reason for shooting at iso200?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Garry Edwards
What you've got here isn't actually 1 key light and 1 fill light, it's 2 key lights. The only possible improvement would have been to have both lights at the same effective power, which is the norm for this type of shot.
Interesting. The left light was more than a stop dimmer than the right light, and shot through an umbrella as far away from the head and as close to the subjects as possible, which was how I understood the fill light to have to be set up, but I guess the other (reflective) umbrella wasn't as reflective as it ought to have been! Whatever, it worked
Not sure why everyone is getting so carried away about these shots.
Yes - something somewhere in C.Fn is set so that I couldn't access ISO 100
Not sure why everyone is getting so carried away about these shots. They show loads of errors in composition - framing - cropping - yes, even lighting. If you stick up a couple of lights and squeeze the trigger you'll get a picture - but this is not the sort of level that you should be aiming at.
Not sure why everyone is getting so carried away about these shots. They show loads of errors in composition - framing - cropping - yes, even lighting. If you stick up a couple of lights and squeeze the trigger you'll get a picture - but this is not the sort of level that you should be aiming at.