Photography Studio and Lighting Forum

Hosted by fabulous Florida-based professional fashion photographer, Asylum Steve, this forum is for discussing studio photography and anything related to lighting.
Results 1 to 6 of 6
  1. #1
    Amy's Photography
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Hopkinton, MA, USA
    Posts
    8

    Help!!! (With shadows!)

    Alrighty, here is my problem:

    I was asked to shoot my friends dance portfolio, but being only 17 I dont have a light set up, but I figured I would be ok with just my flash. Well now I have this shadow problem....



    The first picture (the original) has better skin but I hate the shadows they make her look heavier and they are just distracting. The second one (the after) is more sleek and no so distracting but she looks pasted onto the background (and excuse my sloppy PS job I had to do that in 5 minutes so I could post it).

    Anyways if you guys have any ideas on what I should do (or even just let me know which one you like better!), any at all, it would be totally helpful!!

    Thank you so much!!

    ~Amy

  2. #2
    Amy's Photography
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Hopkinton, MA, USA
    Posts
    8

    Re: Help!!! (With shadows!)

    Shoot, I just read the guidelines (which I missed when I first posted this) and I've posted this in the wrong forum. Is there any way to move this? Sorry everyone!

    ~Amy

  3. #3
    has-been... another view's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    Rockford, IL
    Posts
    7,649

    Re: Help!!! (With shadows!)

    Sure, I just moved it to Studio & Lighting.

    You're only about a foot away from your background, so that's why the shadows are so well defined. You could move her away from the background to soften them, but they will get larger unless you've got a huge room. If the room is big enough (this is really more like commercial airliner hanger size though) you could have your model so far away from the shadow wouldn't hit it because of the angle of the light. There are a lot of ways to do something like this with only one light, but IMO you're not going to get rid of the shadows.

    OTOH, shadows aren't necessarily bad. In the right context they can provide a lot of drama to a shot.

  4. #4
    MJS
    MJS is offline
    Digital Video Moderator
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Miami, FL
    Posts
    1,390

    Re: Help!!! (With shadows!)

    The strobe looks like it is almost directly on camera. You need the subject out from the background at least 4 feet if possible. The strobe on a stick with (lightstand) with either an umbrella or softbox to soften and wrap the light would also help an awful lot. The following was shot in studio with hot lights through a difuser and a 42 inch reflector to the left side to act as a fill light.
    Attached Images Attached Images  
    Michael
    Nikon Samurai #8
    Avid Editor
    Sony Shogun

  5. #5
    re-Member shutterman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Virginia
    Posts
    350

    Re: Help!!! (With shadows!)

    Can you move your flash of your camera at all? Do you have a light meter? If not the suggestions below might be tough to pull off.

    Move the subject off the background as suggested.

    Move the light off to one side at an angle. If you don't have a softbox try blasting the flash at a piece of white foam core (bouncing the light back to the subject -rather than directly at the subject) - the bigger the piece the bigger the light source the softer the light (less contrast and shadows)

    Put another piece of foam core or something to reflect the light opposite the flash. This will help fill in the shadows as well.

    Hope this helps - good luck!
    Wes

    Who are they, where are they, how can they possibly know all the rules?

  6. #6
    don't label me 2kids2shoot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    Oregon, USA
    Posts
    130

    Re: Help!!! (With shadows!)

    If you can't move the flash (eg bracket), can you move setup to a natural light source? A friend has his backdrop strung from a clothesline in his garage so he can open the door. Of course, if it's 10 degress out, that may not work too well.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •