Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Encouraging people to pose - tips for great photography

As a professional photographer I have actually only rarely worked with a professional model. My most recent experience of models was working with the Oxfam Bridal Shop in Heswall. The manager had arranged for some volunteers to wear the dresses and I would photograph them.


Click on the images to see them larger

So may people are shy of having their photographs taken and neither of these two girls had been formally photographed before. However, they had a natural beauty and without too much posing created some every elegant and simple images.


These we intend to enlarge and use in the shop window to advertise the quality of the wedding dresses which can be bought there. I hope it gives these two young women and their families a buzz to see their glamorous images large on the high street. Perhaps they will be less shy next time the photo opportunity comes.


Here is an idea, find someone else with a camera, both dress up, and take pictures of each other in a beautiful garden or other location. Take lots of pictures and I am sure many will look fantastic!

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Telephoto lenses - tips for good photography

A telephoto lens brings you closer to distance subjects. Very useful when you are photographing wildlife and sport. Also useful when you want to take candid shots of people at a wedding, you can stay remote and observe the action from a distance. If you are not using a flash they may not even know you have taken a picture.

The pictures below were taken at telephoto focal lengths.

 


Focal length 90mm using a 'prime lens', not a zoom


Focal length 160mm using a zoom lens which can go from 28 to 160mm


Focal length 160mm using a zoom lens which can go from 28 to 160mm


Focal length 330mm using a zoom lens which can go from 105 to 450mm
I wonder what the groom had just said to his dad?

Telephoto lenses do two key things to the image. They foreshorten perspective, making things not only look closer to you but also distances between objects at different distances away appear closer together. Secondly, the depth of field, the amount in focus is also shallower, which generally means distracting detail in the background is lost to blurring and the 'bokeh' effect seen clearly in the highlights in the vegetation in the last picture.

Have fun playing with your zoom and telephoto lenses but use their effects knowingly, and creatively.

Saturday, 13 August 2011

Wide angle lenses - tips for good Photography

Currently my widest angle lens is 18mm and I use it mostly for landscape shots and when I am forced to stand too close to the subject and want to get more of them, or the background, into the frame. I don't tend to use it for deliberate distortion effects but may do if the right subject comes along.

The first picture is of Buckstone Edge. With the wide angle I was able to include the grass in the foreground which I also lightened by 'dodging' in photoshop to add depth to the image. Depth is a perspective advantage of wide angled lenses. It also fitted with the sunshine and shadow weather. The second is of Talacre Lighthouse. The wide angle makes the lighthouse appear to lean backwards but I chose not to correct it as the effect added to the height of this sad derelict building. The last shot is of Eliseg's Pillar and although I have partly corrected it, there is still a slipping away on the right due to the distortion of a wide angled lens. In all three images getting a lower perspective added to the wide angled effect. If you photograph people with a wide angled lens up close from a  low or high point of view then either their feet or their heads look disproportionally big! Try it and see.




Distortion increases towards the edges which can be a problem when photographing buildings and people at the edge of the frame. Convergence of lines is also a greater issue with wide angle lenses, bit all can be either corrected or reduced afterwards with the right software and willingness to learn how to use it. An extremely wide angled lens is also called a 'fish-eye' because the distortion is so great but sometimes this effect can work to the advantage of the photographer with the right subject and situation.

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

To zoom or not to zoom? - tips for good Photography

Many cameras have a zoom lens as standard now. Even when you buy a 'big' DSLR (Digital Single-Lens Reflex Camera) the lens that comes with them as a standard is usually some kind of zoom. It is because we all want the detail, the close-up, the intimate, to be able to catch the distant action. These three images of the beautiful Raffaelle Monti marble statue of a Veiled Vestal Virgin show how a true optical zoom work, all the increasing detail is real detail. The stone seemed almost semi-transparent, an amazing carving. It is to be seen in the Oak room at Chatsworth House in Derbyshire. It was featured in the recent film version "Pride and Prejudice". The alternative to zoom is to actually  get in closer and not to be 'lazy' about composition by using the zoom.





The Human eye has no zoom, but is remarkably good at differentiating light and dark and colour. We have designed cameras and binoculars to do with lenses what we cannot do ourselves, and that is to get up close and personal even when we are sometimes physically remote.

Do not however trust digital zoom. As mentioned in a previous post digital zooms are filling in the tone and colour between the known tones and colours using software prediction. Any real detail is not being recorded. Optical zooms are actually using a set of lenses to effectively get closer to the subject and real detail is being seen, just as if we were walking up the the object to see it better with our eyes. Unfortunately all those lenses and the distance makes the image dimmer and poor quality lenses not only create a blurred image, but one that is often darker and flat in tone. Of course the higher the quality of the lens then the higher the price, but for good quality images there is no shortcut.

Next blog will be on wide angle and telephoto lenses and some of the interesting effects you can get when using your different lenses.