Thanks for all the advice so far!
I have a 24-70mm 2.8 and a 50mm 1.4 and was considering borrowing a macro for close ups of eye make up. As for location, the makeup artist is leaving it to me decide but I think she was thinking white background. I will be doing it from home and have a white blind I could use as a backdrop, some black sheeting I have used before for dramatic shots and also wanted to do a few in natural light in my garden. From a bit of online image searching, a grey background seems to be used a lot and looks good, so I am also considering buying a grey backdrop. I have 2 small soft boxes, a large one (3 speed lights) and a reflector. I often use a lot of bounce flash but am pretty much self taught lighting wise and don't yet feel very confident when setting up indoor lighting, so any more advice with that would be a great help!
Thanks!
Stick the model next to a nice big window that doesn't have the sun streaming in directly through it. Shoot lots.
If you're not that confident with using artificial light, don't confuse things with it. Afterwards, don't mess about with them too much as they're supposed to show off the MUA's skills, not your post production skills.![]()
Yes, they need post production of course, as every image does. Just don't go nuts as some people do with smoothing and repainting make-up in post - fine for fashion shots, but not much use to demonstrate a MUA's work.
Thanks for all the advice so far!
I have a 24-70mm 2.8 and a 50mm 1.4 and was considering borrowing a macro for close ups of eye make up. As for location, the makeup artist is leaving it to me decide but I think she was thinking white background. I will be doing it from home and have a white blind I could use as a backdrop, some black sheeting I have used before for dramatic shots and also wanted to do a few in natural light in my garden. From a bit of online image searching, a grey background seems to be used a lot and looks good, so I am also considering buying a grey backdrop. I have 2 small soft boxes, a large one (3 speed lights) and a reflector. I often use a lot of bounce flash but am pretty much self taught lighting wise and don't yet feel very confident when setting up indoor lighting, so any more advice with that would be a great help!
Thanks!
Its because the neutral tones don't take anything away from the make-up/jewelry/clothing what ever you are photography. I wouldn't use white background, it just looks cheap and tacky (IMO).
Regarding the 'Look'. I would be tempted to do something like this. Simple lighting, neutral background, nothing to detract from the make-up. http://ferenc.biz/photography/files...eup-Artist-Hair-Stylist-MUA-New-York-City.jpg.
This is exactly what I had in my head so plan to look for a grey backdrop. How is the lighting set up in this example?
Its because the neutral tones don't take anything away from the make-up/jewelry/clothing what ever you are photography. I wouldn't use white background, it just looks cheap and tacky (IMO).
Regarding the 'Look'. I would be tempted to do something like this. Simple lighting, neutral background, nothing to detract from the make-up. http://ferenc.biz/photography/files...eup-Artist-Hair-Stylist-MUA-New-York-City.jpg.
This is exactly what I had in my head so plan to look for a grey backdrop. How is the lighting set up in this example?