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k clayton Registered: Jan 05, 2008 Total Posts: 404 Country: United States |
Hi all, I have been asked by a friend to photograph the family. One small problem...I don't do people so i need some help. I will be using the 50D the nifty 50 and prob the 70-200. All will be handheld. I will be shooting RAW and jpeg. What style should i use that will give the best skin tones. There are 3 people, should i use multiple focus points or just 1. If just 1 who should i focus on? Any tricks will be much appreciated thanks! |
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M Vers Registered: Jan 01, 2008 Total Posts: 10333 Country: United States |
Shoot RAW and adjust in post using a calibrated monitor...that should do it |
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bluetsunami Registered: Sep 03, 2008 Total Posts: 937 Country: United States |
I guess since you'll be using a 50mm, be mindful of the DoF when you're shooting the three people together. |
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EA6B Registered: Mar 22, 2002 Total Posts: 5423 Country: United States |
Use a tripod! It's so much easier to concentrate on your composition. It lets you take the time to do things right. |
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SloPhoto Registered: Feb 18, 2008 Total Posts: 970 Country: N/A |
use a single focus point, and watch your dof |
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k clayton Registered: Jan 05, 2008 Total Posts: 404 Country: United States |
Thank you! |
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xrayvision Registered: Feb 20, 2005 Total Posts: 565 Country: United States |
Bring a gray card and in each lighting situation get one shot with someone holding the gray card. Skin tones are far more color critical than landscapes. |
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cgardner Registered: Nov 18, 2002 Total Posts: 7929 Country: United States |
Gray card is a good idea for process control. Belt and suspenders approach is to use the card to set Custom WB. As a starting baseline I put the camera in "daylight" WB, shoot the card filling the center circle, then selecting that frame via the menu set Custom WB. Then I shoot the card again with Custom WB. That gives me several data points: 1) a shot showing the color of the lighting relative to daylight, and 2) an image that should measure R=G=B with the eye dropper and look neutral on my monitor when opened. The Custom WB tag in the file header controls display on the monitor. ![]() With artificial light just reverse the process. Look at the face from profile-to-profile to find the most flattering angle to the camera, them move the key light about 45 degrees from the nose and above the eye line where it will reach both eyes and not cast a distracting nose shadow. If you look through the lens and see the nose holes the camera is usually too low. The view is much more flattering when camera position is above the eye line of the subject. For that reason I don't recommend a tripod unless the subjects are seated because it will put the camera too low and you will not be able to react to subject movement to find the most flattering camera angle to the face. A trick I use for heavy subjects or those with loose jowls is to stand on a chair and have them look up at me. The stretches the neck skin, but keeps the face/camera relationship the same as eye level. Outdoors, even in indirect light, the high angle of the light will cause the brow to shade the sockets. Do the same thing: get the camera above the subjects and have them lookup so the same light that hits the cheeks reaches the eyes. Shooting distance controls perspective. The "wide angle" distortion of faces is caused by shooting close, not the focal length of the lens. I find 7-8ft flattering for most faces. Very thin/narrow ones are flattered more by shooting from further away. When the camera gets closer than 6ft. the nearer nose starts to get exaggerated. Try this: Take your nifty 50 and shoot the same face from 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 ft. Then in Photoshop scale and crop the photos so the heads are all the same size. Compare how the distance changes the appearance of the face. So when shooting find the most flattering angle and distance, then select focal length to get the desired crop in camera. Given the choice between shooting wider and cropping later, versus cropping in camera and winding up closer with less flattering perspective, I'd opt for the former. Chuck |
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k clayton Registered: Jan 05, 2008 Total Posts: 404 Country: United States |
Wow Chuck thanks! |