Kansas City Photographer :: Angela

Today turned out to be a great day.  A mid morning shoot with Angela, a great lunch with Alissa at KU Med and when I got home, our awesome neighbors brought us a mason jar of homemade hot chocolate mix and marshmallows (yes, those were homemade too.)  A killer combination; with Angela’s vibrant red hair and Nikon’s new 85mm f/1.4 G lens I’d picked up a few days ago I had high expectations from the start.

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Normally a modeling shoot involves a fair amount of editing, but not Angela’s.  I’ve done such minimal amounts of editing on these it’s not even funny.  Fair skin is some of the best to work with in Adobe Photoshop for this very reason.  Actually, I don’t get to crazy with my editing unless I have too.  My style has always been clean and classic with a few modern techniques thrown in the mix.  As I review my earlier works I’m quick to identify my editing mistakes.  One of the biggest turn-offs I see quite frequently is where photographers over-edit the eyes.  Listen…eyes are NOT supposed to look like Joe Biden’s teeth.  If you go back back in the archives you might find a few where I’ve gone overboard.  Then again, maybe you wouldn’t notice since the untrained eye is in fact, untrained.  I’ve got a couple of tutorials I plan to do over the winter with eyes being one of them.

In case you didn’t know, Angela takes stunning photographs!

Angela Modeling Photograph

85mm 1.4G
Geoff Poitras Photography Kansas City

I think this session is going to officially put 2010 in the books.  It’s been a great year.  Thank you to all of my clients, models and photographers with whom I’ve met and worked with, it’s been a pleasure.  Be safe this holiday season and Merry Christmas.

Lauren

Without a doubt, the coldest photo shoot I’ve ever done.  Wearing layers, gloves and a hat, I arrived on location to find Lauren hardly in a coat.  No one ever said looking pretty meant being warm!  We had to work fast as the point of diminishing returns was going to come fast.  Aside from a near vicious dog attack and my numb hands, it was a good shoot and the first Modelmayhem shoot of 2010…better late than never.

Everything I shot involved either natural light or the use of one speedlight.  For all of the shots below I used the Sunpak 120J flash unit,  28″ Apollo softbox, a 60″ convertible umbrella or a 20 degree grid.  Thankfully there was enough of an overcast to kill all the ambient light for some of these shots as waiting until dusk wasn’t an option.

Instead of just presenting the photos as with previous blog posts I thought I’d give more of the thought process behind each one, how I composed it and how I decided to light it.

Lauren - Model Mayhem - Geoff Poitras

Before I took this shot I knew I wanted to create some separation between Lauren, the foreground and background.  The field had some tall grasses which gave me some foreground to work with.  I asked Lauren to stand next to some trees  that had a few protruding branches sticking out which I wanted to be on the same focal plane as she was.  Everything behind her, at varying distances provided nice background separation.

I selected the Nikon AF-S 70-200 f/2.8 VRI and stood a good 25 feet from Lauren, set my exposure and simply asked her to stand still with her hands in her pockets….she did great didn’t she?  This shot is actually 10 or 12 shots which I later stitched together in Photoshop to create one image.  If I’ve confused you, let me explain.  Look at the above image and picture it as a blank canvas.  Now in your mind, divide the canvas into 12 equal areas in a grid pattern.  As I compose the image, each individual area (12 total) is 1 photo.  This technique has been called a couple of different things such as the Brenizer method, after NYC Wedding Photographer Ryan Brenizer, who reintroduced the technique.

Are you wondering why I’d choose to take 12 photos to create 1 instead of just taking 1 photo? In short, it gives the image the look as if it were shot with a medium format camera.  Using a telephoto lens with a shallow depth of field we make it appear as if it were taken with a wide angle lens.  A wide angle lens on it’s own simply cannot produce these results on a DSLR.   If you want the full technical write up, I’ll refer you here to read Ryan’s explanation and directions.  Some like the results, some don’t.  I sometimes do it because it’s different and I like the way it looks.

Lauren

No crazy photographer tactics on this one!  I still had the 70-200 lens on my camera so that’s what I went with here.  As I looked around for different areas that would make interesting shots, I asked her to stand in the center of a very small patch of waist high grass.  Again, hands in the pockets for a more casual look, plus it was only 22 degrees.  Although this shot wouldn’t lead you to believe it,  to the immediate right was an ugly tree stump and to the left was a dwarfed evergreen tree.  I kept the framing nice and tight and the end result is the much overdone girl in the grass shot.  I like the way her jacket contrasts against the rest of the image and the light shadow under her neck to help define her face.

Time to do a little off camera lighting.  One of the jackets Lauren brought with her had a faux fur collar.  As soon as I saw it, this shot popped into my mind.  I asked her to pull the hood up over her styled hair (darn photographers) and pull it in close to her face.  She later dubbed this shot “Chewbacca”.  For this shot I used the 120J speedlight fired into 60″ umbrella.  As I took a few test shots I wasn’t getting quite the amount of shadows I wanted because the umbrella was such that it filled them all in.  To fix that, I partially closed the umbrella and tried again.  I needed to make sure that the shadow from the nose wasn’t intersecting the lip and the shadow from the eyebrow wasn’t preventing the light from lighting the left eye.  After a few more adjustments, I got what I was looking for; catchlights in the eyes, a few shadows to give her face some depth and the big furry collar to bring it all together. I would have liked for there to be a little less light on the far (left) side of her face.  Something for next time.

By the time 3:45  rolled around, we were both cold and ready to wrap things up.  Thankfully it was just dark enough with the overcast for 1/250 of a second at ISO 200 to kill all ambient light, hence the black background.  I attached the 20 degree grid to my flash and after a few test shots, we were ready.  I thought a profile shot would be nice with the grid.  If you’re not sure what a grid is, it’s a light modifier that gives you a more focused beam of light.   I wanted to allow enough light to spill onto the visible side of her face to create a triangle of light underneath the eye, as with Rembrandt lighting.  In the original photo, Lauren took up the entire frame.  I later added a large black void in photoshop to make it appear as if I shot it at a distance.    You can’t do this in every situation but when your backgrounds are completely white or black…or any solid color for that matter it works well.

February 3, 2011 - 11:44 am

Josh - Geoff,

Love the ‘tutorial’. This is really enlightening as a novice. Keep stuff like this coming. You were right about her left cheek (though I only saw that after you pointed it out!)… slightly overblown highlight. Which leads to a question. How do you ensure you really ‘got it’ when viewing only on the LCD? Bracketing everything? Histogram check? Too often I get wrapped up in getting the composition down that I want that I miss the subtle details.

February 3, 2011 - 11:41 am

Josh - Geoff,

Love the ‘tutorial’. This is really enlightening as a novice. Keep stuff like this coming. You were right about her left cheek (though I only saw that after you pointed it out!)… slightly overblown highlight. Which leads to a question. How do you ensure you really ‘got it’ when viewing only on the LCD? Bracketing everything? Histogram check? Too often I get wrapped up in getting the composition down that I want that I miss the subtle details.

Family Photos : Shawnee Mission Park

This past Sunday I met up with the family who won my photo session from June’s silent auction.  I met Matt, Julia and their two children Drake and Marshall at Shawnee Mission Park to take some family photos.  Good thing I decided to take a look at the sunrise/sunset calendar prior to scheduling their session as Sunday was Daylight Savings Time; sundown=5:12PM!  How I wish the long days of summer would come back.  With Thanksgiving just around the corner, winter will be here before we know it and their session was likely my last outdoor session for the year.  The winter months for photographers are slow, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.  My camera will get a much needed vacation to Nikon to be cleaned and I can start preparing my marketing tools for the spring senior rush.  Here are a couple photos from Sunday.

Family Photography
Family Photos
Family Portraiture

What is this…TFP…you speak of?

With the internet modeling community becoming more popular now than ever before I thought I’d make a post to answer some of the email requests I get.  It seems as if every day there are hundreds of new model hobbyists popping up on one of the many internet modeling / social media sites such as Model Mayhem.  While I’ve met and worked with several very talented models I have gotten pretty good at spotting just another pretty face, from a model who works hard and takes pride in their hobby.  These social media sites are a place for models, photographers, clothing designers, makeup artists and hair stylists connect and collaborate.  I started using these sites almost two years ago and had the opportunity to work with some very talented people.

One of those super talented friends, Nori, recently posted a video on YouTube talking about TFP which I felt covered the topic well.  If you’re new to the community or new to the term, take a minute and educate yourself.  (Excuse her video etiquette, but she does have a pretty one of a kind portfolio!:))

I don’t accept alot of TFP work currently but enjoy it once or twice a year to try a few new techniques or to maintain my editing skills which I don’t normally get to use when editing weddings or portrait shoots.  The last TFP shoot I did was with Jessica down in the West Bottoms to practice with the creative use of off camera lighting.  Since I do so few of these each year, I have quite a bit of fun with them and actually learn a thing or two.  In the end it’s all about being effective and efficient and that’s something I want to pass along to my clients.

F a c e b o o k