Garry Edwards
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- Garry Edwards
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I've been doing studio photography all my working life and I can tell you this much...
1. You are not alone. Anyone who tells you that they have all the answers is either a liar, totally inexperienced or not very observant. Every job is different and brings its own problems.
2. Because every job is different, there is no such thing as a studio decor, a lighting setup etc that's 'right' unless all of your shots need to look the same, for example if everything has to have a white background and dead flat lighting. But having the right lighting, the right light shapers and the knowledge to use them well is a big help.
3. You will always need to do some PP work on every image, even if you have a 'perfect' studio arrangement and a lot of skill, unless you just overxpose everything, which isn't good photography. The trick is to get it as good as you can in camera and use PS to improve a good image, not to rescue a bad one.
4. Make life a lot easier by tethering your camera to a laptop - the laptop screen will show you faults that you just won't see on a camera screen.
5. Bear in mind that your clients are just ordinary people, they won't notice slight technical faults - in fact they probably won't notice anything as long as they like the expression on little Johhny's face
so don't worry about it - it's not the same situation as the one I had yesterday for example, photographing a whole brochure full of 3 piece suites against a white background, when everything has to be absolutely perfect
1. You are not alone. Anyone who tells you that they have all the answers is either a liar, totally inexperienced or not very observant. Every job is different and brings its own problems.
2. Because every job is different, there is no such thing as a studio decor, a lighting setup etc that's 'right' unless all of your shots need to look the same, for example if everything has to have a white background and dead flat lighting. But having the right lighting, the right light shapers and the knowledge to use them well is a big help.
3. You will always need to do some PP work on every image, even if you have a 'perfect' studio arrangement and a lot of skill, unless you just overxpose everything, which isn't good photography. The trick is to get it as good as you can in camera and use PS to improve a good image, not to rescue a bad one.
4. Make life a lot easier by tethering your camera to a laptop - the laptop screen will show you faults that you just won't see on a camera screen.
5. Bear in mind that your clients are just ordinary people, they won't notice slight technical faults - in fact they probably won't notice anything as long as they like the expression on little Johhny's face