Aalst, BELGIUM - Professional wedding photographer Pieter Van Impe (www.fotografie-vanimpe.be) shows in this video how he copes with a situation he isn't used to: working on location with a model.
For more info and to see the pictures in better quality, please visit www.squeezethelime.com
why have all the photos got vignetting in the corners? Is this an after effect in photoshop orjust as shot in camera? I love it, beautiful.
040506keri 1 year ago
@pipatic Underexposure in the old film days meant dark negative, so the positive would be all Whited out, it was like a contradiction, but now in digital domain, it means just Dark, not enough light hitting the subject, in this case... the background!
am i right guys?
TERRANCIO 1 year ago
great job :P.
raszvanson 2 years ago
is it 70-200 f4 IS? doesnt look as big as 2.8
maratus 2 years ago
i would think its the 2.8
adrianvilcan 2 years ago
Is that 70-200mm f.4 Is? looks like.
loco039 2 years ago
Get a reading on your background and the underexpose it by 1 or 2 stops. The flash will illuminate your subject, and the background will be darker. It took me awhile to figure this out in my mind. You are "creating darkness" when it's actually fairly bright out. Make sense?
rocklobster2112 2 years ago
Nice advice, makes you worry less about having perfect lighting set-ups and stuff.
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HOWEVER....Make sure you have insurance if you are shooting somewhere like this! In the UK if someone got seriously injured by something falling or cutting themselves on something you could get sued. just an e.g. say that wooden structure fell over onto the model and killed her - you could end up going to prison for manslaughter. Not being negative - just warning people!!!
AndyBJ 2 years ago
How far are you when shooting your subjects while using the 70-200 white barrel?
whoppers1000 2 years ago
he means, making the subject brighter than the background. So the subject stands out more. You do this by over powering the background with your strobes.
l0lercycle 3 years ago