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gilbertaldous
July 03, 2015
I really like this photo. Everything in it goes towards perfectly framing the model.
Same photographer See allBehind The Lens
Behind The Lens
Location
Along the outside corridor of Fullerton Bay Hotel, Singapore. You can see part of Marina bay sands in the distance.Time
9:52pmLighting
I liked the bokeh in the background which was pronounced at f1.6. I made sure that the light fell on her face in a way that wasn't distracting - most of her key facial features are lit fully or fully in shadow.Equipment
Canon 5Dm3, 50mm f/1.4 USM. Nothing else IIRC.Inspiration
I loved the repeating bands of shadow and light cast by a wall light on the railings. I had recently seen some images by Ryan Brenizer featuring a lot of light and shadow play and wanted to incorporate that into this portrait session.Editing
Yes. Noise reduction, colour correction and vibrance boosts. Burning around non-important areas. There were some hotspots on her forehead which I retouched out. Because the light hit her chin at a sharp angle, some unflattering skin texture was created, which I also retouched away. Retouching was done in Photoshop with the healing tool.In my camera bag
For work - Canon 5Dm3, 50mm f/1.4 USM, 24-105mm f4, 70-200mm f4. 2 flashes, backup camera, reflector, tripods, flash triggers. For leisure - Canon 5Dm3, 50mm f/1.4 USMFeedback
Get a fast lens (preferably < f2 ) and shoot at as high an ISO as your sensor and noise reduction software allows - Lightroom works well for me at ISO 3200. There is a world of a difference in what you can capture when your camera can 'see' as much or more light than your eyes can :p Also, light is light, doesn't matter if it comes from a ball of fire in the sky, flash or a street lamp. Pay attention to its direction, softness, colour temperature and how it falls on your subject and modify relevant parameters to achieve your end goal. :) eg. through changing distance, or adding diffusion. feathering or pointing the light at subject (or moving the subject relative to the immovable light), matching colours of light sources...