Kev M
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 4,347
- Name
- You can call me Sir.
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Evening all, I'm after some help if you'd be so kind. Lucky old me has been roped in to take some presentation photos at the works dinner on Saturday (the venue is Alnwick Gardens Pavillion if anyone has ever been there.
As usual I'm succesfully confusing ambition with ability and refuse to do anything simple so I asked to have a look around the place before the event so I could get some ideas. Inside is horrible, magnolia walls or bare brick in one direction and glass walls in the other, not pretty glass either but plastered with big dots to stop idiots and the partially sighted from walking into them, horrible reflections that can't be heped with a polarizer. There's no ceiling for bouncing the flash either it's all angles, not a flat bit in sight. Outside there's a terrace with this very cool starlight type thing in the floor. I took a lot of photos tonight and thought I was getting somewhere but now I'm back home I realise I really didn't get as much figured out as I should have done.
Lens wise there's the kit lens:thumbsdown: 50mm 1.7 or a 24mm 2.8.
Outside there's an arch with an intricate gate across it. It helps disguise the background but the 50mm prefers to focus on the gate or the background rather than the subject.
50mm 1/25 ISO 200 F1.7 Silver brolly with SB25 to the left
I tried a shot without the gate but check out the crappy background.
50mm 1/25 ISO 200 F1.7 Silver brolly with SB25 to the left
Then I tried shooting with the crappy background behind me. The arch would have been nice but the floor is not lit in front of it from this direction so I shot further back. Now the 50mm won't focus on the subject for some reason, I swap to the 24mm and it hits focus every time.
By this time people were getting a bit tired of the waiting so I knocked it on the head.
So, here's the questions I have.
1)Is the last shot the best one with respect to the setting?
2)In the last one are the lights across the middle too distracting? I think the only way to get rid of them is to position the subjects under them which will give me problems with reflections on the pictures being presented.
3) is 24mm (36mm) too wide for a full length portrait?
4) would the picture work better cropped tight, feet at the bottom of the frame with the lights behind or with space at the bottom with the lights below the feet?
5) Any other ideas, this is the first time I've done this and I'm putting myself under a lot of presure to produce something better than what they're expecting.
As usual I'm succesfully confusing ambition with ability and refuse to do anything simple so I asked to have a look around the place before the event so I could get some ideas. Inside is horrible, magnolia walls or bare brick in one direction and glass walls in the other, not pretty glass either but plastered with big dots to stop idiots and the partially sighted from walking into them, horrible reflections that can't be heped with a polarizer. There's no ceiling for bouncing the flash either it's all angles, not a flat bit in sight. Outside there's a terrace with this very cool starlight type thing in the floor. I took a lot of photos tonight and thought I was getting somewhere but now I'm back home I realise I really didn't get as much figured out as I should have done.
Lens wise there's the kit lens:thumbsdown: 50mm 1.7 or a 24mm 2.8.
Outside there's an arch with an intricate gate across it. It helps disguise the background but the 50mm prefers to focus on the gate or the background rather than the subject.
50mm 1/25 ISO 200 F1.7 Silver brolly with SB25 to the left
I tried a shot without the gate but check out the crappy background.
50mm 1/25 ISO 200 F1.7 Silver brolly with SB25 to the left
Then I tried shooting with the crappy background behind me. The arch would have been nice but the floor is not lit in front of it from this direction so I shot further back. Now the 50mm won't focus on the subject for some reason, I swap to the 24mm and it hits focus every time.
By this time people were getting a bit tired of the waiting so I knocked it on the head.
So, here's the questions I have.
1)Is the last shot the best one with respect to the setting?
2)In the last one are the lights across the middle too distracting? I think the only way to get rid of them is to position the subjects under them which will give me problems with reflections on the pictures being presented.
3) is 24mm (36mm) too wide for a full length portrait?
4) would the picture work better cropped tight, feet at the bottom of the frame with the lights behind or with space at the bottom with the lights below the feet?
5) Any other ideas, this is the first time I've done this and I'm putting myself under a lot of presure to produce something better than what they're expecting.