cgardner Offline Upload & Sell: Off
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ukphotographer wrote:
Frankly, I don't care that you don't want to please me, but when I'm being lectured by a self qualified expert using hairbrained perceptual methods and ignoring regular professional practices then I'm not going to shut up and go away and I will point them out. So yes, I'm happy to disagree, and I'm absolutely fine with that.
The broader theme of William's "Stobist" thread was why out of all the approaches used over the years did the "Strobist" approach gain traction, and he asked who did it gain traction with?
Hobbyists. What is my approach designed to do? Address the needs, budgets and skill levels of HOBBYISTS.
Non-profession hobbyists coming to here for advice are for the most part have limited budgets and are totally ignorant about artificial lighting beyond a flash in the hot shoe. Being a hobbyist I face the same budget constrains, have chosen my equipment accordingly, then adapted my knowledge and previous professional experience to best use that equipment.
I didn't always use white towels. Prior to buying into the Canon DSLR system I had always used manual flash using power and distance to control ratio and exposure. I didn't need to meter the lights because my manual flash approach, learn from Zucker and put into practice professional for a couple years shooting wedding for him did not require it to achieve consistent professional quality result on color negative film and prints or transparency film. As mentioned, after "retiring" from the wedding grind I shot my white and black dogs on Kodachrome using the same "professional" approach learned from a top professional (who paid me while learning) and had no problem recording detail in both.
Switching to digital gave me three new tools for judging exposure: playback, histogram, and clipping warning. Having used Photoshop since V1 in the early 90s and used digital cameras since buying an Apple QuickTake in 1995 by the time I bought my Canon 20D and 580ex flashes in 2004-2005 there wasn't much I didn't know about color management or digital image capture and digital reproduction. That is what I did for a living "professionally". I don't know what you were doing in 1984, but I was getting paid to lecturing to other graphic arts professionals, including photographers, on how best to shoot their photographs and design their publications for optimal cost effective printing...
http://super.nova.org/TP/Poster1984_1.jpg
http://super.nova.org/TP/Poster1984_2.jpg
I did the same thing back in the late 70s as production manager at Judd's Inc. Once a year the company would hold a 2 day seminar for customers whose magazines we printed like McGraw-Hill, Architectural Record, AIA Jounal, AMA Journal, AOPA Pilot, etc. Not to teach them design, but how to design cost effectively by understanding the limitations of the production process.
I don't know what you were doing "professionally" in 1990-91, but I was preparing for my second overseas assignment managing the publishing center in Manila and buying, installing and training staff to use digital scanners and imagesetters to convert the mostly analog workflow to digital, and going to places like Hong Kong, Tokyo, Bangkok and Rangoon to teach them how to use Mac based DTP for their locally edited 4/C magazines we printed for them in Manila.
We had started using Mac based DTP and graphics in 1987 and bought any software that hit the market for R&D. Photoshop arrived on my desk around 1991 on 800K floppies. In 1995 we bought an Apple Quicktake 100, but it wasn't until late 2000 while back in Manila for my third tour there, this time as Director of the facility I spent my own money for a Kodak DC290 digital.
I was already on the net back then and participating on a Yahoo Filipino photography forum. I already knew many of the people on it from working on the Internet launch there in 1994-95 when I was web master at the only commercial ISP and taught seminars about the Internet jointly sponsored by USIA and the ISP. The people on the group ask me to hold a "face-to-face" class and needing a venue I called Kodak Philippines who knew me already as a customer of their graphic arts products at work and got them to sponsor it at no cost to participants. I was asked by one of the attendees to repeat the class at the Graphic Arts Show she managed and be the keynote speaker. Since all the participants had net access I did the class notes in HTML and posted them on-line to save the cost of printing handouts. It's still on line at: http://super.nova.org/PhotoClass/ In 2001 in the Philippines most were still shooting film due to high import duties on equipment. In the first class I only covered the first three parts — in was a one-day six hour seminar with a lunch break.
Like my approach now it the advice was targeted primarily for hobbyists using a camera typical of what they might buy at the time. The main theme was while good gear helps, what I more important is understanding the underlying cause and effect. Once that is understood one can objectively decide what gear it the best value for their goals and free from technical stumbling blocks competently follow their creative muse to the limits of their imagination.
For the second class at the Expo which was attended by mostly graphic designers vs. photographers I focused more on the post processing reproduction aspects such as color management that wasn't even in the vocabulary of photographers and designers back then.
I was paid quite well throughout my career — once I left "professional" photography and could afford any gear I wanted. I bought a med. format camera, lenses and color enlarger in the late 70s when I had space for a darkroom again, and in the 80s and 90s did mostly underwater photography with flash. When switching entirely to digital in 2000 I could have afforded a "pro" body or Canon D30 that hit the market at the same time understanding the underlying technology and only having the needs of a hobbyist I knew first generation gear would be a bad investment.
Had I been a professional photographer I would not have switched entirely to digital in 2000. Remember, what I did for a living since 1974 is reproduce the work of professional photographers in magazines and in 2000 digital wasn't up to professional reproduction standard for anything other than small (file dimensions / 300) images. My 2.1MP DC280 could make a 4 x 6 about on part with my film camera. The 5MP D7Hi I bought two years later could make a 5 x 7. I waited until 2004 and the 20D meet my personal "buy it" benchmark of 8MP and under $1,500 with an ultra wide angle lens available. I knew, again from 25 years of work experience in "professional" reproduction and the fact I rarely make a print larger that 8x10 it would suit my needs for several years.
I still use the 20D as backup to my 50D. I bought $2,500 of studio lights not because I needed to make a living but because I was curious. I switched to Canon flash from Vivitars to take advantage of the camera's advance features. Not all the time with ETTL flash or HHS, but to have it available for when I found it more convenient to use.
Had I been a professional photographer I would have made different gear decisions. But I'm just a hobbyist and my #1 priority for gear isn't whether it will meet the needs of my clients as yours are, rather whether it is within my self imposed "toy" budget and convenient to use. I tend to be frugal and have different goals than yours, one of which was to save and be able to retire at age 50. I could have, but hung in another five years because the money was very good and the job still interesting 
Yes I am a hobbyist, giving advice to other hobbyist, but finding myself constantly defending and trying to explain my approach and methods which is largely based on professional work experience in reproduction. I'm just a hobbyist, sort of like how an ex-PGA tour pro who did ever made past the Nationwide or European tour is a golfer. I still enjoy the game and others find they can benefit from my experience and advice. Not professionals mind you, just fellow hobbyists who enjoy the game but are struggling to keep the ball in the fairway.
The advice give is the same Ansel Adams gave me via his books, Monte Zucker gave me via hands on training and daily C&C, reinforced by 30 years of photographic reproduction experience:
PHOTOS LOOK MORE REAL WHEN THEY HAVE A FULL RANGE OF TONE SEEN BY EYE
The origin of the "White Towel" method was a result of switching to Canon flash and using it in ETTL mode. I didn't meter with manual speed lights because I worked systematically by distance. With ETTL one must rely entirely on camera feedback to correctly exposed highlights.
In ETTL mode you don't need to worry too much about the shadows in the flash lit foreground because the lighting ratio controls shadow tone. One simply needs to know what ratio will put sufficient detail in shadows to met THEIR criteria for acceptable exposure, then adjust FEC until the highlights have detail.
Last time I checked the RULES OF PHOTOGRAPHY handbook it was filled with blank pages. So I can choose to make my shadows devoid of detail, the same as seen by eye, or even lighter than seen by eye. When not shooting range tests I do the latter. With experimentations I found by starting from a ratio of A:B = 1:2 with my approach the resulting file will usually have lighter than seen by eye (i.e. normal looking shadow). In other works I set the ratio on the flash so the flash creates a scene range, in the foreground at focus distance, which is LESS THAN SENSOR RANGE WHEN HIGHLIGHTS ARE EXPOSED ACCURATELY.
That no different than my goal had been with film. But the problem I found with flash shots with very small highlights was: 1) the large metering zones didn't accurately measure them and adjust the flash, and 2) the highlights were also so small they did not register on the histogram.
I didn't have the same problem in situations where the background was dark and the highlights were relatively large because when I saw the right side of the histogram running of in the first shot as in this overexposed frame...
http://super.nova.org/TP/ClippingHighlights.jpg
I could see, react and adjust exposure lower. Here's the ex F-18 fighter jock
my oft seen towel shot without the towel SOOC with the Levels histogram superimposed...
http://super.nova.org/TP/TowellessGary.jpg
See the problem? The histogram is useless for judging exposure in the highlights when they aren't big enough to register.
My common sense solution? Add larger highlight area to the photo for a test shot AS A PROXY FOR THE HIGHLIGHTS THE CAMERA COULD NOT DISPLAY...
http://super.nova.org/TP/TowelGary.jpg
See the difference? The towel when accurately rendered creates eyedropper readings in the 230 - 254 range when exposure is adjusted just below clipping, which in a dark scene will create an easy to see hump. Adjust exposure until the hump just kisses the right edge and simple as pie, perfectly render highlights towel — AND THE FACE NEXT TO IT.
Mind you this was soon after getting my 20D when I hadn't experimented with the clipping warning.
When I started using the clipping warning in addition to the histogram in the playback, exposing per the histogram towel spike, I noticed that when I got the highlights dialed in via the histogram the clipping warning also disappeared. The RAW file would be a bit under in the highlights, but by the time I made the JPGs they would be back similar to what the clipping warning in the camera shows.
The advantage of the clipping warning vs. histogram was that it shows WHERE highlights are clipping. So if the white towel was in front of a white background the I could tell via the clipping warning when adjusting foreground and background lighting when each was clipping INDEPENDENTLY.
That gave me the ability to adjust lighting like this without a meter, based entirely on camera feedback. Not because I was anti-meter on principle, but because I COULD NOT METER ETTL FLASH OR MANUAL FLASH WITH MY CANON FLASHES.
http://super.nova.org/TP/WhiteBGTowelCard2.jpg
Do I do it perfectly per UK's exposure rules? Apparently not, but it was for me a very practical solution that turned the histogram and clipping warning into a powerful diagnostic aid when setting exposure and ratio.
I did not, until recently, include a black towel in exposure shots. I would look at the separation of the border and black patch on the target, and the 3D knobs on the stand and clamps holding the target. The problem with flat targets, besides glare, is the don't show how light will hit 3D faces. I don't aim for a numerical match, I adjust shadows until they look as seen by eye perceptually are not running off the side of the histogram on the left.
The problem reading shadows accurately via the histogram is the same as the highlights. On a light background small ones don't register. My solution? Make them bigger in the test shot by adding a 3D object which is as dark as any detail in the scene. Anything black will work.
The fact I have several other objects on my stand when setting lights has doesn't mean I use them for setting lights. It a bit like haven't both a thermometer and barometer next to each other on the wall. If you want to know water is in a liquid state you'd use the thermometer to see if the temp is between 0 and 100°C not the barometer.
What is not blurred on the target UK had a hissy fit about is all that is pertinent to how I use the towels, histogram and clipping warning...
http://super.nova.org/TP/CardTargetHistoBlur.jpg
When using speediights I first adjust white towel by pushing it to the point of clipping using the brightest light hitting it, which in that shot is the hair light. Could I do that with a flat target? No, which is why I uses a white towel. After setting highlights I check the detail is seen in the folds of the black towel and adjust fill as need. The HHS done in 2010 didn't have a towel. My method has evolved with time.
With studio lights where I can control the lights independently I have all the lights on but below the point of correct exposure so there isn't a huge difference in spill fill as I adjust them. I finalize the fill first based on the tone in the detail in the towel normally placing them at Zone 1 for a "normal" contrast or lighter (Zone 2) for a "softer" look, then accent to Zone 9 below clipping, the key light until it looks in balance (Zone 8) then finally the background lighting if I;m using any.
Keeping black and white towels between the point of clipping is like keeping water in its liquid state, not freezing anywhere, not boiling off either. It is not necessary to have a thermometer to know if water is between freezing and boiling, or know the exact temperatures that occurs (which varies with elevation in any case) you just need to look at the water. If it isn't solid and isn't bubbling and steaming its liquid.
A basic tenet of process control is that you can only control precisely what you can measure with accuracy. That's all the towel thing is about — making the histogram and clipping warning more effective and useful. I you have exposure parameters that are different than mine, the same method would be useful to you, you would simply need to use different tone targets. For example if for some reason you wanted a .45 density object to clip you'd want to use an object with reflective density .45 with the clipping warning.
In concept adjusting exposure per the end points with towels is not any different that measuring it off the middle of the range by centering the histogram with a 12% card. But the way I look at the problem if your nose itches (highlights) or your toes itch (shadows) to you solve the problem by scratching your belly in-between?
While a professional open minded enough to try my approach might find it useful in situations where exposure must be set out of necessity by histogram and clipping warning (e.g. the incident meter dies) it mainly geared towards the use of speedlights that can't be metered as a way for hobbyists starting out can use to both control exposure and better understand the cause and effect of fitting scene to sensor and how doing that improve the appearance of the image content. It will not make their photos any more creative, just more competent.
I trust if they get to the point of see a target patch is 20 points low they will also have the skill level to remedy it if they find it is a problem. That the broader point of the exercise.
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