I recently purchased a book, Creative Photoshop Lighting Techniques, by Barry Huggins. Finally! One of the Photoshop gurus gets it! Whatever you're going to do with an image in post-production begins in production!
This shouldn't be a secret although many photographers seem to act as if it might be.
If you're going to digitally manipulate an image in post, which nearly all of us regularly do, why wouldn't you do everything possible, while in production, to make that manipulation easier to accomplish, less obvious, and a success?
In my work, the people doing the post-processing have the ears of my clients long after I do. They can make or break me with those clients. Anything I can do in production to make their jobs easier in post, yielding better results, is not going to go unnoticed by them. It might not always be mentioned to my clients but the opposite, i.e., that I'm making their jobs more difficult, probably won't be mentioned either.
Whether you're planning to perform a great deal of digital manipulation or simply and with subtlety enhance your images, you should be thinking about post-production while you're shooting. And that includes things like lighting and composition. It especially concerns things like lighting and composition.
I can, for instance, decide in post how intense my highlights will appear only if there's something, some detail, in those highlights to work with. Once you've entirely blown all the detail out of a highlight, you're not going to recover it. You're not going to recover it with RAW converters and you're not going to recover it in Photoshop. If it's gone, it's gone. Film behaved the same way although, when it came to highlights, many film stocks were more forgiving.
The same holds true for cropping. You can crop an image in post nearly any way you want providing you've left enough negative space to do so.
The book I mentioned above, of course, isn't overly concerned with highlights or cropping. It focuses mostly on production lighting techniques to achieve certain special effects in post.
When you go to the movies and see a special effect in the film, do you think the filmmakers suddenly decided to manipulate, while in post, what they've already shot in production? Of course not. They planned the effect before beginning production and they utilized many techniques in production that would later become the raw materials for the effects.
I know most of us shooting glamour aren't often thinking of adding special effects but the point is still valid: Production contains the key ingredients to successful post-production. Post-production doesn't stand on it's own. It's not the foundation of a great image. Unless, of course, that image is purely or mostly a product of digital art.
Okay. I'm off my soapbox... for now.
The pretty girl at the top is Charlotte from 3 or 4 years ago. Captured in an empty, non-descript, 2nd floor room in a warehouse in downtown L.A. Five-foot Octo for my main. Couple of strips for kickers, either side, from behind. Flex-fill reflector in front for fill. Converted to B&W in post.
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Lighting For Photoshop
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