- Messages
- 19,271
- Name
- Gary
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Sooooooooo......
I am almost at the 4 month mark since opening the shop. I think I have shot over 200 individuals on white backdrops, and have learned to love it, and learned to REALLY hate it too.
Rather than rant, rave and pick holes, I'm just going to come out with it. Is the white background really a black hole for creativity? Does it suck the imagination out of your photography, and does it lead you to be lazy and shoot to formula?
Lastly, and this is really my biggest & most important question...one which I am asking myself as well. Have you given up on getting a perfect light setup, and accepted second rate results? I expect NO ONE will admit this.
However
I have been watching lots of web sites, lots of images on flickr, looking in magazines, looking at competitors work, and in my opinion, there is an absolute and wide disregard for correct lighting, based on what I have learned since opening. I see lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and of shots with what I can only describe as bland middle exposed skin tones on blinding bright backdrops, with no real shape to the faces, no shadows to speak of, and a catch light the size of a pin prick.
Maybe I am completely deluded, and what I am witnessing IS good studio work, but if that's the case, then I dunno what I have been doing the last 4 months with my constant tweaking and playing with lights.
Now, my big fat ugly disclaimer.
- I DON'T have ANY formal studio training.
- What I like may be 100% wrong, and technically poor
- I am not going to enter into a "Let's judge one anothers work" argument, and if one starts, I will ask the mods to kindly intervene and close the thread
It's an open ended ambiguous thread, with no real targets other than the general standard of white BG studio work.
And can I just take this oppertunity to give a shout out to Carl Davis. Of all the peoples work I have been following both here and elsewhere, his always delivers for me, and he has become a major source of inspiration - although I doubt he knows it
. Serious talent IMO.
Gary.
I am almost at the 4 month mark since opening the shop. I think I have shot over 200 individuals on white backdrops, and have learned to love it, and learned to REALLY hate it too.
Rather than rant, rave and pick holes, I'm just going to come out with it. Is the white background really a black hole for creativity? Does it suck the imagination out of your photography, and does it lead you to be lazy and shoot to formula?
Lastly, and this is really my biggest & most important question...one which I am asking myself as well. Have you given up on getting a perfect light setup, and accepted second rate results? I expect NO ONE will admit this.
However
I have been watching lots of web sites, lots of images on flickr, looking in magazines, looking at competitors work, and in my opinion, there is an absolute and wide disregard for correct lighting, based on what I have learned since opening. I see lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and of shots with what I can only describe as bland middle exposed skin tones on blinding bright backdrops, with no real shape to the faces, no shadows to speak of, and a catch light the size of a pin prick.
Maybe I am completely deluded, and what I am witnessing IS good studio work, but if that's the case, then I dunno what I have been doing the last 4 months with my constant tweaking and playing with lights.
Now, my big fat ugly disclaimer.
- I DON'T have ANY formal studio training.
- What I like may be 100% wrong, and technically poor
- I am not going to enter into a "Let's judge one anothers work" argument, and if one starts, I will ask the mods to kindly intervene and close the thread
It's an open ended ambiguous thread, with no real targets other than the general standard of white BG studio work.
And can I just take this oppertunity to give a shout out to Carl Davis. Of all the peoples work I have been following both here and elsewhere, his always delivers for me, and he has become a major source of inspiration - although I doubt he knows it
Gary.





