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Children's portraits Tips/Tutorials

How to Shoot Portraits in Harsh Light

Up here in the high desert of New Mexico we have beautiful but very strong light. This can be great for creating dramatically contrasty shots, but not so good for taking flattering portraits of people.

Camera sensors find it hard to capture the full dynamic range of both the fully-lit areas and those parts of the image in shadow. So the highlights can be blown out to white, and the shadows full black – neither containing any detail.  This can lead to foreheads being bright white and the eyes being in black shadow.

Bright light also makes children squint and sweat – not that attractive.

With all this in mind, when I’m organising portrait sessions for clients, I try to schedule them early in the morning or later in the afternoon.

But in real life we do things during the mid-day hours. I was recently at a birthday party for a friend of my daughter. The party was held at an outdoor swimming pool around lunchtime. The food and cake were laid out on a light-colored concrete deck –  there was almost no shade.

The problem with harsh light: blown highlights on the poor kid's nose and across his shoulders, and the tell-tale raccoon eyes in shadow.

From a photography perspective, it was brutal, but the kids were running around having a good time and there were some nice images to capture.

So here are some tips for shooting in harsh light.

1) Find some shade

The softer more diffuse light you find in the shade is much better for photographs. And if your subjects are looking out towards brighter areas, there’s a good chance you’ll get flattering catchlights in their eyes.

Here's a much happier kid in the shade, with much more even lighting and catchlights in his eyes

2) Get in tight

Even if your subject’s in the shade, there might be some sunlit areas in the background, which will cause distractingly bright blown out spots. Getting in tight – zooming in so your subject fills the frame  will reduce the chances of that.

And if your subject is in the sun, getting in tight will help the camera expose for just what’s important in the shot.

3) Use the backlight

Backlit poses work well to frame the subject with some flattering light.

A subject lit with strong sun from behind might well be pretty well lit from the front with the ambient light from the bright day. If you keep the subject between the yourself and the sun, the sun will act as a rim light, helping to separate the subject from the background and lending a pleasing halo-like effect.

The other benefit of having the sun behind the subject is that they won’t be squinting as they stare right into it.

Your subject might well be underexposed in the scenario, so you can either adjust for exposure on site, and/or fix in it post (especially if you’re shooting RAW) – often a levels adjustment will help, too.

4) Use fill flash or a reflector

To be honest, I almost never do this (from laziness not for any better reason), but using a fill flash will remove some of the racoon-eye shadows you can get on bright days.

You can also use a reflector to bounce some light up into faces. This can be a formal photographic reflector if you have one handy, or you can improvise with some white paper or the like. Sometimes the scene you’re shooting includes its own natural reflector, for example if a child is drawing and leaning close to the paper.

The fill-in flash and wide angle lend this shot a slightly surreal feel, enhanced by the lomo-style processing.

5) Filter the light

This is more of a pro technique than something you’ll be able to find on the fly, but filtering the light using a white translucent photo umbrella or a big diffusion panel (like these from PhotoFlex) takes the edge of the brightness. Some wedding photographers travel with their own white tent that they’ll use if they’re stuck for some good shade.

6) A Neutral Density Filter

If (like me) you tend to shoot as open as possible to blur the background, then the brightest days can create real troubles. Even at the lowest ISO, your fast glass might just be letting in too much light even at the fastest shutter speed you’ve got. To get down to f/2.8 or thereabouts to give you the narrow depth of field you’re after, you can use a neutral density (ND) filter – essentially sunglasses for your lens. The filter blocks a proportion of the light from entering the lens, but won’t change the colour temperature of the light that does get through.

(Landscape photographers use a graduated neutral density filters which reduce the light only from the top half of the filter. These work well at balancing out a bright sky and darker foreground, but they’re less useful for portrait shooters who need things a little less regular).

I hope these tips will give you some options when you find yourself at a high-noon shoot-out. And let me know if you’ve got any other good suggestions.

Categories
Children's portraits Personal

Clearing the Vision – the Creation Myth

Every organization needs a creation myth that encapsulates its core values and beliefs. Here (with a bit of help from Google, and with my tongue more or less in my cheek) is the CTV creation myth. Hope you like it.

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Children's portraits Santa Fe Tips/Tutorials

The Pet Parade – working with children and animals

It’s Fiestas time in Santa Fe, one of the highlights of which is the  Desfile de los Ninos, also known as the Pet Parade. Originally an occasion for children to bring their pets to be blessed by the priest, it’s broadened into a relaxed and funky parade including high school bands in fancy dress, chickens in cages, some amazing costumes and still a large number of children and pets (including this year chickens, rabbits, cockatoos, ferrets, cats and lots of dogs).

Shooting a parade like this sounds as if it would be easy with all the great spectacles on offer, but it can actually be tricky. The first problem is that you can’t move around too much – I had my spot on the side of the parade route and that was about it. So choose wisely and watch the direction of the sun – I was almost shooting straight into it today, which wasn’t ideal (but I was right outside the door to our office, so at least I had hot coffee).

Another problem is that there’s likely to be a lot of visual clutter. Your naked eye filters out the messy background when you see a cute dog dressed up like a cowboy, but the camera will also show the random feet and the white line on the street that your eye glossed over. The other people in the parade (and the other people watching it from across the street) make it hard to get clean shots (especially if you can’t move around to edit them out). You can shoot wide open (in other words with a lowest number aperture your lens can deliver) to create a narrow depth of field, blurring the background, but this brings up another problem – lens choice:

Sometimes you want an wide-ish establishing shot – to show a whole group of folks as they approach, for example. Other times, it’s the little details that stand out. This mixture is a good approach, but that calls for a range of maybe 28mm – 200mm or more on a full frame camera (around 18mm – 130mm on a crop sensor). That’s a big ask of any single lens especially if you want some good sharpness wide open.

In other years I’ve swapped between my 24-105mm f/4L and 70-200mm f/4L on one body, but that’s a bit of a pain, so this year I cheated and used two camera bodies, putting the 70-200mm on my old backup Rebel XT and keeping the 24-105mm on my 5D. The downside was that I looked like a newspaper shooter, but the upside was that I had the equivalent of a full-frame range of 24-320mm at my disposal.

I wasn’t trying hard to capture decent shots of every group that passed, just photograph the things that grabbed me the most.

Here’s a selection from this year’s parade, with a few from earlier years thrown in for good measure.

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Children's portraits Personal

First day of Kindergarten

Getting ready for first day of school

Fionnuala started kindergarten today, and even though she’s been going to preschool for a couple of years, there’s no denying that her first day of real school is a landmark.

She’s been increasingly excited as the day approached, and was the first one down this morning, anxious not to be late.

I wanted to get a shot of her getting ready herself, to show both her growing independence and how little she still looks to us. That contrast between growing up and still being a so young seemed to be what today was about.

Wearing her new strawberry socks (held back for today) and sitting at the top of the stairs, this one gets close to what I was after.

I had the wrong lens on for this really (the 24-105mm f/4L). It’s pretty dark in the hall, so I had to push the ISO up and there’s still a little motion blur on her fingers. I also adjusted the exposure compensation down 1/3 of a stop – partly to get me a faster shutter speed, but mainly to show that it wasn’t bright in the hall (and play up some of that reflected light on the concrete from the bathroom window at the back). A ‘perfectly exposed’ shot here would have looked too bright to me, and I didn’t mind losing the shadow detail around her skort.

Hand-held at 1/10 sec is not recommended, but the image stabilization seems to have helped quite a bit. A fast lens (like one of the primes I normally use) would have been the better choice for a faster shutter speed, and blurred the background a little more, but we were just heading out the door. Sometimes you just have to get the shot with whatever you can.

Details: Canon 5D, AV mode, 1/10 sec, f/4.0, 47mm, ISO 1600, -1/3EV.
Aperture work: slight crop, noise reduction, manual white balance adjustment, vignette added, shadows and highlights tweaked.

Categories
Children's portraits Personal

Golf shoes

It’s been a busy summer here, with lots of web work and a trip back to England. But we’ve had some time to relax a little.

Here’s Fionnuala on the fake grass in her golf attire. She hits a ball with a piece of PVC pipe into our rock-covered drop inlet. I’ve no idea how she learned about golf, but her version is pretty accurate.

I like the simplicity of this image’s composition, with strong angles, lots of the green offset with the splash of colour in the stripey socks. And the fact that she’s got her shoes on the wrong way round.

Image info:  Canon 5D, EF 50mm f/1.4, ISO 250, f/5.6, 1/50

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Children's portraits Personal Santa Fe

Happy 4th July

My daughter on the way to the Pancakes on the Plaza event in Santa Fe. Happy 4th to all my US friends.

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Children's portraits Inspiration Personal

I’ve come over all Disney

End of a Good Day

Just had a few days in Southern California, which included some Disneyland time, as you can see from the above shot our our daughter at the end of a busy day.

As a confirmed Disney sceptic before I first went to the park last year, I’m now something of a zealous convert.

This is partly because the whole thing makes my daughter so happy, which is hard for a parent to argue with.

But it’s partly because I’ve been thinking a lot recently about running companies based on core passions and painstaking implementation, and few organizations do that as well as Disney.

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Children's portraits Santa Fe

One-to-One Workshop on Children’s Portraits

On Saturday my friend Ned and I got together to explore an idea I’ve been kicking around for a while. ‘Wouldn’t it be great,’ I thought, ‘to help photo enthusiast parents take better photos of their kids?’

I’d bring my stuff over as if it was a shoot I was hired for, but as well as taking photos myself, I’d also help Ned with his images.

So we tried it. The rough plan was this:

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Children's portraits

Happy Birthday, Lucas

Happy Birthday, Lucas

One from a birthday party last week. The party was held in a funky roller rink that was alternately pitch dark or neon-lit, so I despaired of getting any decent shots, especially as the kids were whizzing by on skates or scooters. But there’s something about candlelight you just can’t beat.

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