Category Archives: Photography Tips

Do It Yourself Studio – Inexpensive Studio Solutions

Laura Hall

It is no big surprise that outfitting a studio with the latest and greatest tools and toys can be a very expensive undertaking. From backdrops to stands to light modifiers to props – the list goes on and on and the dollar signs keep rolling by.

Fortunately it is entirely possible to have a highly functional – even professional – studio without getting a second mortgage. Here are a few inexpensive solutions I’ve found and used in my studio.

Dean Collins Tinker Tubes PDF file is legen…..dary among DIY studio photographers. This free download is full of studio solutions you can build yourself with easy to find and use PVC pipe. I have used the ideas in this file for many of my own studio projects – including my pet project the Big White Box.

Posing stools are great to have in the studio. You can raise or lower the seat as needed and roll them around to position them better, but buying a posing stool from a photography studio supplier can run $60 or more. You can easily find rolling stools at your local Lowes or Home Depot for less than $40. Check where they keep the welding supplies.

When you start shopping for professional canvases and backdrops the temptation to raid the bedroom closet to find a bed sheet can get pretty strong. While it is tempting to use a pretty bed sheet as a backdrop, the dreaded “wrinkled sheet” is dead give away that you are an amateur photographer. Or even worse – a GWC! That said, used correctly an interesting bed sheet can make an interesting backdrop. You can also find interesting and fun back drops in the remnants and clearance bins at your local fabric store, and even gift wrap paper can be used.

Stacked Spinner Necklace by Talisa Selby

Photographed By Talisa Selby

I have had more discussions than I can count about what kind of lights a photographer needs in the studio. There will be arguments for one brand over another, one light versus multiple lights, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. The fact is that it doesn’t matter how many strobes or hot lights you have in your studio if you don’t know how to use them, and some of the best photographers in the world only used the sun! True, studio photography almost by definition includes the use of some sort of strobe, but great portraits can be done with one light. Small product shots such as jewelry and things your’re going sell on ebay or etsy can be done with just regular light bulbs, and modern speed lights (what we used to call “flash” back in the day) are more than adequate to meet the needs of most home studio photographers.

Controlling that one light, whether it is a speed light, a hot light, or the sun, is easier to do with light modifiers. You can buy kits that have fancy reflectors, diffusers, and light blockers. You can also make your own inexpensive versions.

Start with poster board! A plain sheet of white poster board will set you back about a buck and a half, and will allow you to evenly and neutrally bounce light back onto your subject. A plain white baby crib sheet stretched over a PVC frame will effectively diffuse harsh sunlight, or spread out the light from a small shop light. Bi-fold doors from your local “Loews Depot” painted white on one side and black on the other make perfectly useful large panels for bouncing and blocking light.

For more DIY photography tips, check out this website. Prowl the aisles of your local home improvement store and find creative and inexpensive solutions to many studio needs.

(The photo at the top is Laura Hall, a.k.a. Layla Beatdown, one of the roller derby girls with the Atlanta Roller Girls. She is sitting between a window and a silver reflector. No additional light was used)

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Making It Rain!

Come on summer!

I will absolutely be trying this when the weather warms up!

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Photography Classes In Canton and Cumming

Did you get a new digital camera for Christmas? A new point and shoot with all the bells and whistles? Your first DSLR? Now you have it and you aren’t really sure what to do with it!

I am offering a class called My First Camera for people in Canton, Cumming, and Jasper, Georgia.

This 3 hour class includes:

  • Using your camera’s built in automatic modes
  • Best picture size settings
  • Understanding color temperature
  • What all the settings mean
  • Best practices for portraits
  • How to control your flash
  • …and more

This class is held on Saturday afternoons from 1pm until 4pm and costs $50 (minimum class size of 4 – maximum of 6) at my home studio in Ball Ground, GA.

For more information or to sign up, contact me ASAP

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Photographing Food & Family

I’m looking forward to spending some time with my dad and his wife, my brother and his daughter, my sister and her boyfriend, and my wife at my dad’s house in the the North Carolina mountains next week for Thanksgiving. These family times are a perfect opportunity to update family portraits, and should not be passed by.

The folks at Tamron (they make really good lenses for Nikon and Canon cameras), sent out these articles about photographing your Thanksgiving feast, and shooting holiday portraits.

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How Did I Light It?

I recently had a photo shoot with the lovely Kris Melton, founder and editor of the on-line local rock resource website rockfistreviews.com. This was our second shoot, and I was very happy with the results. I uploaded a few to Flickr, and sent a tweet about the upload. One of my Twitter followers, “DantePasquale“, asked how I lit one of the shots. I told him I’d do a blog post about it. So, here ya go, Dante!

Kris wanted some shots that showed off her new chest piece tattoo as well as submit for (hopeful) inclusion in a nationally distributed tattoo lifestyle magazine. She and I had worked together before with good results, and we managed to squeeze a few hours into an otherwise busy weekend for me to get this shoot done. This was done in my basement home studio. I’m fortunate to have a big room to spread out in, but a large space wasn’t needed for this shot.

The background is two pieces of 2 1/2 foot wide corrugated steel. You can easily find this at your local “Lowes Depot Home Improvement” store. (Be *very careful* with this stuff. The edges can be sharp and jagged and give you a nasty cut.) I store these panels outside under our deck so that eventually they will age gracefully. In an ideal world, I would have scavenged a few pieces from one of the myriad rural outbuildings around us that have been razed to make room for another subdivision, but this blog isn’t about that.

On either side are double fold doors – again a “Lowes Depot”  purchase. One side is painted black and the other is painted white. The black sides are facing Kris to cut some of the natural reflectivity of the steel. This was an idea I gleaned from Zack Arias, so I won’t claim it to be original.

I am about 5 feet in front of Kris with my Nikon D300 and trusty workhorse of a lens the Tamron 28-75 2.8. I’m seated on a low rolling stool, and over my head is an Alien Bee 800 fitted with a beauty dish set to f11. To camera right and just a foot and half in front of  Kris is another Alien Bee 800 with a blue gel just brushing the steel behind her. The f-stop on that light changed a few times while I sought the right balance, but it was well below the f11 of the main light.

As I said, even though I have a big space to work in, this shot could have easily been done in a garage or even a living room (as long as your wife doesn’t mind you leaning dirty corrugated steel against her walls).

There is an almost happy-ending punch to the end of this shoot which I’ll share with you as soon as I know for sure that the punch will happen — ooooo, foreshadowing!

In Adobe Lightroom, I fiddled with the clarity, contrast, black levels, and saturation to get the effect I was looking for.

 

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