Hi,
I want to get more experience with portrait photography. Still no Pentax 67, but I have a beautiful Rolleiflex 3.5F with Rolleinar 1 and 2.
I have a Rick Oleson spilt screen ground glass in my Rolleiflex.
I lean on the coupled lichtmeter (yes I know....). I also use only natural light.
In some pictures I made, if found it hard to focus, and some portraits are slightly out of focus, maybe due to too open aperture, but don't know for sure.
Anyhow, tips and tricks are welcome!
Thanks in advance!
Get a spool of hemp twine and a cloth retractable measuring tape for taliors, marked inches/feet on one side and centimeters/meters on the other.
Figure out your ideal F stop, work out the zone minimum and maximum , as well as shutterspeeds, then have someone sit for a series of shots in existing light and your electronic lighting, at each ideal distance and depth of field, making knots/notes on lengths of twine/paper pad and with permanent watercolor markers on the tape rule.
You should make a string for each distance that starts at the film plane of the camera and ends at the ideal focus spot, ie. eyes, bridge of the nose, etc, when stretched taunt enough without pulling you tripod/camera off it's feet.
Likewise, keep tapes with similar markings, less than $2.50@ at Wal-Mart, and a notebook.
With this measuring method, you should be able to quickly set-up, including reflectors and like.
Develop and analyze the results for your ideal results and chose what will work for your photography.
Shoot a series for each film, developer, lens, strobe, etc and keep a running log of your evolving work and you should be able to have collection of photo ideals to work from.
Others can explain better what I have written here but it will work and you can do the same for close-up photography.
A marked telescoping antenna can also be useful for this method.
Concentrate on making head and head and shoulder shots, the use of reflectors for lighting and zone focusing in general and in depth of field in detail.
Cheers