From the category archives:

Engagements

Many times I have done wedding photography and portrait photography against the sun and depending on how you see this situation you can either get bad pictures or succeed and get creative pictures.

1. Use a lightmeter..

To get a sense of what exposure you will need to properly light your back lit subject

2. Use your on-camera flash

Pop that sucker and light up your model. You’ll at least get to see the person’s face.

3. Use an external flash (1, 2 or more..)

It will be a lot better than using your on-camera flash.. a lot more powerful too. But of course you’ll need something to trigger these, such as a pocket wizard.

4. Use a smaller aperture

Try to reduce how much the sun fills your scene. With the use of the on camera flash you can most likely get a decent shot this way. It can also create a nice effect on the sun.

5. Use a reflector

Become friends with the sun and reflect it back to your subject. Gold can create a nice effect but you can also use white to minimize the blindness to your model.

6. Don’t backlight

Turn your model so that the sun does not become a backlight. Have the sun light up your subject from an angle.

7. Photoshop

Play around with different settings in Photoshop to make it a little brighter, such as using Curves and Levels.

8. Turn it into a silhouette

Silhouettes always turn out beautiful. This is where your subject is back lit and turns black in the foreground

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Engagement

July 11, 2008 · 0 comments

I recently had an engagement photo session with Coral and Glenn. They decided to have the shots down in Ocean Beach in a secluded section. Once you go down the long flight of stairs its quite nice and hidden! A fairly small area but many possibilities to expose different kinds of shots. The weather was not on our side as it proved to be a challenge. Very gray and gloomy looking. Here are my favorites:

Glenn

Coral

Coral

laying in the rocks

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