Another image from my last weekend shoot-a-thon. The sun was rather bright and the EV range pretty wide, but I did manage to hold the values in her outfit pretty well. Not an easy task in the FL sun!
Congratulations Scott for the way you've handled a very difficult subject, both the girls skin tones and the dress are perfectly exposed which isn't easy in strong sunlight, how did you meter the subject ?
Congratulations Scott for the way you've handled a very difficult subject, both the girls skin tones and the dress are perfectly exposed which isn't easy in strong sunlight, how did you meter the subject ?
Thanks, it was not easy. I used a hand held Sekonic L-358 meter in the incident mode and then I dropped the exposure an additional half stop. Rather than trust that the ND filters are exactly 3 stops, I will usually place them infront of the meter when I take a reading.
Congratulations Scott for the way you've handled a very difficult subject, both the girls skin tones and the dress are perfectly exposed which isn't easy in strong sunlight, how did you meter the subject ?
Thanks, it was not easy. I used a hand held Sekonic L-358 meter in the incident mode and then I dropped the exposure an additional half stop. Rather than trust that the ND filters are exactly 3 stops, I will usually place them infront of the meter when I take a reading.
Thanks Scott, I didn't think the F4 TTL meter would handle this subject so well, an incidental reading minus half a stop for the lighter background is the perfect way to meter it because the skin tone is about that much darker than the background.
Thanks Peter. I did consider using fill flash on this one, but decided against it as I was afraid I WOULD blow out the highlights to the point where I could not fix them in PS or on the baseboard. Our sand here is as almost as white as sugar and acts like a HUGE reflector (you really DO need dark sunglasses just to go to the beach sometimes, is is that bright) and you have to be very careful not to overexpose by even a half stop or your highlights go right out the window. If you are shooting transparencies, a half stop over is the kiss of death for that image. Shawnda is really not as dark skinned as you would be led to believe given this image, but that half stop underexposure did darken her tones just a bit.
She is such a gorgeous young woman, I have worked with her going on two years now, and she never disappoints!
Congratulations Scott for the way you've handled a very difficult subject, both the girls skin tones and the dress are perfectly exposed which isn't easy in strong sunlight, how did you meter the subject ?
Thanks, it was not easy. I used a hand held Sekonic L-358 meter in the incident mode and then I dropped the exposure an additional half stop. Rather than trust that the ND filters are exactly 3 stops, I will usually place them infront of the meter when I take a reading.
Thanks Scott, I didn't think the F4 TTL meter would handle this subject so well, an incidental reading minus half a stop for the lighter background is the perfect way to meter it because the skin tone is about that much darker than the background.
Absolutly stunning! I'm very impresed by your perfect exposure of such difficult subject.
Thanks for sharing the image and your thoughts on the matter.
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