Friday 7 December 2012

NEW LIGHTING COURSE IN 2013

Many people have taken my Digital Photography for Beginners course to overcome their reluctance to take their camera out of Auto mode and take control of exposure and depth of field.

For those who are starting to feel comfortable with their camera's creative modes and now want to take portraits or product shots aided by low cost lighting equipment, this 3-hour course should fit the bill.

Dubbed 'Lighting for the Beginner Photographer', the course provides plenty of hands-on practice using equipment the student may not yet own. All that is required is to bring along a digital SLR and to have an understanding of the basic concepts in the Digital Photography for Beginners course. You can also bring a hot-shoe flash if you have one.This is taught in my home in London, Ontario.

To register for the course, please visit http://filmscapes.ca/html/photography_courses.html

Here is an outline of the course (subject to change):


1.       The Camera’s Creative Modes

a.       Review of Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority, Program and Manual Modes

b.      When to use these modes in available light

c.       When to use these modes with fill flash (built in to the camera or external)

d.      Taking control of light and depth of field in the studio with Manual mode

e.      Flash sync and its relationship to maximum shutter speed

PRACTICE: Using fill flash in various creative modes. Observing shutter speed limitations with flash.

2.       Light Sources and Exposure

a.       The meaning of colour temperature and its relationship to outdoor and artificial light

b.      Selecting white balance for the light source (outdoor light/flash/indoor lighting)

                                                               i.      Preset vs. auto white balance

                                                             ii.      Custom white balance: when to use and how to set it

c.       The hot-shoe flash vs. the built-in flash

d.      Strobes (optional)

e.      Continuous (hot) lights

f.        Guide Numbers and Watt-Seconds

g.       Use of the light/flash meter (optional)

h.      Camera metering modes

i.         The histogram as an exposure tool and the meaning of 18% grey

PRACTICE: Experimenting with White Balance presets. Setting a custom white balance. Shooting without flash using various metering modes and comparing results in the histograms.

3.       Remote Triggering of Flash/Strobe

a.       Radio triggers and adapters for flash mounted on light stand

b.      Optical triggering

c.       Controlling the flash in manual mode

d.      Controlling the strobe output (optional)

PRACTICE: Setting remote flash output. Triggering from camera with radio trigger or optically from camera’s flash.

4.       Introduction to Light Diffusers and Reflectors

a.       Umbrellas

b.      Soft Boxes for strobes and hot-shoe flash

c.       Reflectors and Absorbers: outdoors with/without flash; in the studio

d.      Diffusers for harsh daylight

PRACTICE: Take a portrait shot/object shot with remote flash, with and without umbrella Repeat using available light and reflector, then diffuser.

5.       Basic Portraiture Methods

a.       Background stands

b.      Choice of material and colour for the type of shoot (including green screen)

c.       The role of depth of field and lens choice

d.      Using natural light

e.      The single light setup

f.        The two light setup

g.       Balancing sources for intensity

h.      Mixed light sources and the importance of custom white balance

PRACTICE:

-          Portraiture/object shoot using window light and choice of background (try black then white)

-          Portraiture/object shoot using window light, reflector and/or absorber and choice of background

-          Portraiture/object shoot using window light and single hair light (custom white balance)

-          Portraiture/object shoot using single light in studio setting (custom white balance)

-          Portraiture/object shoot using two lights with umbrellas/soft boxes in studio setting (custom white balance)

-          Experiments with other combinations

Wednesday 7 November 2012

Size matters – in sensors, that is.


When digital SLRs started to come into the market, they essentially replaced the 35mm film camera. In most cases, the lenses that fit your 35mm camera could now be used on the new digitals (from the same manufacturer, of course) without the need for any adapters. Sweet.

Those who made this transition noticed something right away. The 50mm focal length lens that gave a ‘normal’ angle of view on their film camera now acted like an 80mm lens, or slight telephoto, when attached to the digital SLR. In other words, the image was now magnified compared to using the same lens on the 35mm camera.

In some ways this was a benefit, because it meant that the telephoto lens you bought for your 35mm camera now reached a bit further on the digital SLR– about 1.6 times further. The downside was that the wide angle lens that used to work beautifully for landscapes on your 35mm wasn’t so wide anymore on the digital.

This difference is attributable to the size of the sensor in the digital camera. Most consumer SLRs use an APS-C size sensor, which is 22mm x 15mm. Compare that to 35mm film at 36mm x 24mm. Given the same lens projecting the same ‘image circle’ on the digital sensor  and the 35mm negative, the digital sensor only captures part of what the negative captures. Essentially, the digital image is magnified (by 1.6 times) since it’s like zooming in on a small part of the image circle.

For years now, professionals who could afford it have been using full frame digital SLRs (example – the Canon 5D) which use a 36mm x 24mm sensor, just like the 35mm negative size. While the manufacturers could have stuffed more pixels into this bigger sensor (and did so to an extent), the big benefit is that they can now make the pixels bigger.

Why? The bigger the pixel, the more light it can gather, meaning the camera will yield less ‘noise’ in the image in low light situations. Overall, the image is cleaner and yes, at a somewhat higher resolution. In fact, Nikon recently introduced the full frame D800 with an astonishing 36 megapixel sensor. Compare that to the Canon 5D’s 22 megapixel resolution or 18 megapixels on most consumer SLRs. Of course, file sizes bloom with higher resolution.

All of this is significant because the prices of full frame camera bodies are starting to slide below the $2000 price point. While APS-C and other similar size sensors kick-started the digital photography revolution, affordable full frames will eventually bring it full circle. The smaller sensors won’t disappear for a while yet, but those of us who came up through the film world will once again be able to shoot the way we used to – only with the immediacy of digital and a moderate size hole in our pocket.

Saturday 25 August 2012

Depth of Field: Choosing the Right Focus Point


Most of the time, when we want to get everything in our shot in focus from our feet out to infinity, the tendency is to dial in as high an aperture number, or f/stop, as possible. In doing so, we hope to increase the depth of field in the image, or the range from our near in-focus point to our distant in-focus point.

But there are two other parameters that have a dramatic effect on depth of field: focus point and focal length of the lens. Two rules of thumb for increasing depth of field are

·         Manually focus as far away as you can from your subject while still keeping them in focus at the aperture you are using, and

·         Use as short a focal length as you can to compose the shot.

Take the second point. We’ve all seen wildlife and sports shots that are taken with a very long focal length lens. The subject is very sharp while the background and foreground are very much out of focus (shallow depth of field). So, conversely, using a short focal length (or wide angle setting) results in a deeper depth of field.

Choosing the focus point, however, is probably the most critical parameter in achieving the shot you want. The first point above implies that the further away from the camera that you focus, eventually you will have everything in focus from a point close to the camera out to the horizon (infinity). To put a label on it, when this happens, you are focused at the hyperfocal distance. This term is mostly of interest to landscape photographers but the point is that, counter-intuitively, we need to focus beyond our subject to get it and the background appearing sharp.

The best graphical demonstration of this is the Online Depth of Field Calculator at www.dofmaster.com. Choose your camera model, focal length, aperture and subject distance. Assuming you focus on your subject, the calculator tells you the near focus and distant focus points. The difference between these is the depth of field.

Hyperfocal distance is also illustrated. If you focused at this distance, everything would be in focus from the distance shown in the illustration out to the horizon. Note that sometimes hyperfocal distance won’t get your subject in focus because the near focus limit is further out than your subject. In this case, you would have to use a higher f/number, shorten your focal length or resign yourself to not having the horizon in perfect focus.

The following images were shot using highly sophisticated dollar store markers at 5 foot intervals. The closest was 5 feet from the camera’s sensor. The camera was a Canon Digital Rebel using a fixed focal length of 35mm in all examples. Each image has been cropped from the originals.

In the first image, aperture was set to f/22 and focus was manually set to the calculated hyperfocal distance of 9.5 feet (just in front of the second marker).  Notice that the 5 foot marker is still in focus, as well as the tree top a couple of  hundred feet away (See insert). This is because the near focus limit is calculated to be 4.7 feet. (Note that the insert looks a little soft because the sensor resolution is starting to come into play.)


 
The second image was also at f/22, but the camera was now focused at our subject, the 5 foot marker. The calculator tells us that if we focus at 5 feet rather than the hyperfocal distance, our focus range now covers 3.3 feet to 7.2 feet. So our depth of field has now decreased from infinite to 3.9 feet just by focusing at 5 feet rather than 9.5 feet from the camera. Note that the markers at 10 feet and beyond are a little softer, and the tree top is no longer in focus (slightly softer).

 

At f/10, our next image was focused at the calculated hyperfocal distance of 21.1 feet (just past the lowest 'lollipop'). The near focus limit is calculated at 10.5 feet, and indeed the second marker at 10 feet is very slightly soft. The tree top, while not perfectly sharp, is close to being in focus. I chalk this discrepancy up to difficulty in getting the focus exactly at 21.1 feet. Note that our subject at 5 feet is badly out of focus, so f/10 is clearly not a good choice if we want focus from 5 feet to the horizon.

 
 
Still at f/10 in the last image, the subject at 5 feet was once again our focus point. Calculated near and far focus limits are 4.1 feet and 6.5 feet, giving a depth of field of only 2.4 feet.


 

The conclusion? Decide whether you want to shoot like a landscape photographer or whether a little bit of in-focus background will suffice for your shot. Even if you don’t use hyperfocal distance, the calculator will help you choose a manual focus point beyond your subject that will keep it in focus but still give you a decent background focus.

Wednesday 22 August 2012

Extending Summer, Photographically


At this time of year, most of us are in denial that the long days, warm evenings and cricket sounds at night are soon going to fade into the cool of autumn.  While the change is inevitable, it’s nice to capture that summer feeling in our art and keep it in our walls year 'round. 
For me, the image shown here (Far and Away) brings on the warmth and color of the midsummer evening. This was shot with a long lens trained on a small island in Lake Erie. The trees almost seem to float above the water because the surface of the lake was calm around the island's shore.  A light ripple from the evening breeze creates a cyan reflection of the sky in the water in between, while the inshore water calms again and reflects the alpenglow-like color above the horizon. 
Swallows were constantly swooping over the lake surface, seeking mosquitoes for the evening meal. Waiting for them to get out of the frame required a bit of patience, but their presence was welcome nonetheless.  
To help visitors to my web site extend their summer by putting such scenes on their walls, I am offering a 20% discount until the end of September 2012.
Please go to http://bit.ly/SUswgc and simply use Discount Code PKGNDY at checkout. The discount can be used for any image on the web site.

Sunday 5 August 2012

The Photographer’s Workflow: Organizing your Images


Unlike the 35mm film days, we don’t think twice about taking reams of shots with our digital cameras. We’re only limited by the amount of camera memory we have. But what do we do with this plethora of photos? Organizing them into genres or collections of similar photos would help us find a particular image....maybe. Wouldn’t it be nice to type a word into an application and have all of the shots that pertain to it pop up on your computer? I have two words for you: keywording and Lightroom®.


For most of us, our image files end up in a big, ugly clump on our hard drive. Now, we have the task of deleting the junk and deciding from the remainder which ones are ‘maybes’ and which are keepers. I know - it’s difficult to make those decisions, and I can’t help you with that. But, once you whittle the pile down, you can start to organize it.


So what is a photographer’s workflow? Simply, this refers to what happens to your images between the moment you download them from camera to computer and the time you prepare them for email, website posting or printing.


Let’s back up to that first step: downloading from the camera. I use the utility software supplied on CD  by the camera manufacturer because it can automatically read each image’s metadata and store that image into a folder named with the date the shot was taken. At least now, we have some semblance of organization, but it’s only the beginning!


Enter Lightroom®, a software package from Adobe. For the purposes of this blog post, I am going to assume that the reader is not a power Photoshop® user, and that the image adjustment tools in Lightroom® are more than sufficient for tweaking the camera images. The workflow might go something like this:


1.       Import the ‘keeper’ image files into Lightroom®. These can be in a number of different formats, including RAW files. You may wish to import them into the default Catalog or create your own before importing. The Catalog stores all information about the images you import into it, including all changes you make, so they can be recalled later and undone step-by-step if you wish. The important thing to understand is that Lightroom® does not actually create a copy of the image when importing it, but rather stores only the location of the original file plus all changes you’ve made to it without changing the original.  In other words, it temporarily pulls in a virtual copy of your image and saves the changes you’ve made to it in the Catalog. The resultant Catalog file is much, much smaller than the total of all the original image sizes.


2.       Create keywords in the Library module for each image. There are two compelling reasons for  doing this:


a.       You can use Lightroom®’s search function to find all images that contain those keywords.


b.      If you sell prints or stock photos online, nobody will find your images unless you keyword profusely.


Within a Catalog, Lightroom® builds a keyword list from all the keywords you add to all the images in that Catalog. As you import new images into the Catalog, it gets easier to keyword them because you now have a list of keywords you can choose from.


What words should you use? Put yourself in the place of someone searching online for a photo like yours. Think of every word you might use in a search string. Include location, objects in the scene, weather conditions, season, genre (ie. Nature, people, architecture) and even the image orientation (portrait, landscape). Cover every possibility – the more words, the better the chance of being found.


3.       Tweak the images for best quality in the Develop module. While not supplying all the capabilities of Photoshop®, Lightroom® has an impressive array of tools to correct exposure, white balance, sharpness and noise. Other tools, such as split toning, allow some impressive creative adjustments to be made. If you’re not feeling particularly daring, you can select from a wide variety of special black and white or colour presets to give your image a different look. If you want to save various versions of the same image with different visual effects, you can create as many virtual copies of the same image as you like and apply different changes to each. The good news is that the keywords also get copied over to each virtual copy. This is probably the best reason to do your keywording before starting your image tweaking.


4.       Do something with your final images. I upload images to various sites for licensing stock images or selling prints on demand, so I like to Export jpeg files from Lightroom to a separate folder on my hard drive. Now I’ve created images that take up space on the drive, which may seem to work against the concept of using Lightroom®'s space-saving virtual copies, but sometimes it’s necessary. Otherwise, if you simply want to print what you’ve created in Lightroom®, you can go straight to the Print module without exporting a file. Or, if the website you use allows it, you can use the Web module to upload keyworded and tweaked images without increasing the footprint on your hard drive.



Once you’ve done all you’re going to do to an image, you can also create Collections within a Catalog. This allows you to store a virtual copy of a photo in a group of similar photos. For example, you may create separate collections for your Nature, Family and Travel photos. Just another way for you to find a photo if a keyword search isn’t helpful.

Wednesday 18 July 2012

Buying Canvasses & Prints the Easy Way

The delivery of artwork from artist to the client's wall has certainly changed, thanks to the Internet. While the experience of going to a gallery and seeing the work before you purchase it is part of the enjoyment of buying art, we are witnessing an explosion in choice online.

If you're willing to forgo the person-to-person experience and trust what you see on a computer screen, you can buy fine art ranging from classic posters, reproductions of the old masters, photographic images and even original sculpture and paintings from contemporary artists. A number of companies have evolved to serve this market, including Fine Art America, Imagekind and Saatchi Online. Most of the time, the risk of buying art online is mitigated by very good return policies.

As a photographer, I want to create compelling images, but don't want the hassle and expense of colour management, printing and shipping worldwide. That's why I've revamped my photographic prints website to include simple-to-follow links to print fulfillment sites like Fine Art America and Imagekind. Not only will they supply you with canvasses and archival paper prints in a wide variety of sizes, but they will frame them, if you wish, using materials of your choosing. Fine Art America also offers greeting cards, made from any image in my galleries.

For local buyers who prefer to deal with me directly, or prefer a hand-signed print, I work with a local facility where I can monitor print quality. Ordering and payment is still handled online, though, via the secure e-commerce feature on my Photoshelter website.

Save some money and time (unless you love going to galleries, of course). Try exploring the vast array of fine art options online!

Monday 30 April 2012

Getting Exposure Right

For those of you who attended one of my beginner digital photography courses, you may recall me harping on about the camera's metering always trying to achieve 18% grey average exposure.

So what does that mean, really? Well, if you were to examine the histogram (that funny looking graph on your camera's LCD screen) for a picture you just took, 18% grey falls smack dab in the middle. When your camera evaluates the light in the scene before you take the shot, it measures the light over several points in the scene and makes a decision about the settings required to make the average value of the exposure fall at the middle of the histogram. This is called evaluative (Canon) or matrix (Nikon) metering.



The reason for this is to try to ensure that the shadow and highlight areas of the scene remain within the left and right ends of the histogram to prevent loss of detail. Remember, the left end of the histogram represents the darkest shadow detail that the camera can capture, while the right end represents the brightest highlight it can handle. If the histogram is not centred, and the graph is rammed against one end or the other, then chances are you've lost some detail. In short, the best histogram is one whose graph trails off smoothly at both ends, barely touching the sides.

There are times when this brainwork by the camera can do a disservice, however. If you're shooting a scene that's 90% snow or white sand, for example, the camera will try to average the exposure to 18% grey. That means your snow or sand comes out a dull grey because it dominates the exposure, and the camera wants to expose it to mid-grey. Not only that, but if there is some deep shadow detail in that remaining 10% of the scene, it may be pushed against the left end of the histogram and be lost.

Knowing this, camera manufacturers provide an exposure compensation button, pictured below. Typically, you push and hold this button while you turn the command wheel and read the exposure compensation on the LCD screen. In the snow scene example, you may need to overexpose (+) by 1 to 2 stops. Now you're ready to take the shot and check the resultant histogram to see if the white end of the graph ends up close to, but not touching, the right end of the histogram. If not, adjust the exposure compensation and try again.

Remember, most cameras do not reset exposure compensation to zero after you turn off the camera. Reset it manually to ensure you don't wreck the next day's shoot.




You can also use the camera's other metering modes, such as partial or spot, to meter the light only in the very centre of the scene. A typical use for these is where you are taking a picture of someone who has a strong backlight directly behind them. Evaluative or matrix metering would read the backlight and most likely make the face very dark. You could use exposure compensation in this scenario, but partial or spot metering will do the same thing by measuring the light reflected from the face (assuming you centre it in the viewfinder) and make it mid-grey. Again, in these metering modes, the camera takes what it measures and tries to average the exposure to 18% (mid) grey.

As with exposure compensation, don't forget to reset the metering to evaluative or matrix when you're finished with partial or spot metering.