Ready, Steady - Shoot

Check out this fun video. Educational, too!

Juan Pons and I shot these segments during the making of our DVD on the how to shoot HD videos with the Canon 5D Mark II and Canon 7D (due out early next year).

We have fun in the videos, but we give some serious HD video - and sound – shooting tips!

Yes, the "backin' up" effect was inspired by the Gregory bothers popular video, "The Backin' Up" song on YouTube.

Explore the light,

Rick

P.S. Click here to see the DSLR video gear I use and recommend.

Set Specific Goals



In photography (as well as in life, of course), it's very important to set goals. If you don't set goals, how do you know where you are going?

Here is an example of what I mean.

While teaching a private workshop in Mongolia, the student and I had the opportunity to get the shot that every horse photographer wants to get: a shot of the horse with all the hooves off the ground.

To get the shot, I told the student that we had to (and you can use these tips when photographing fast-moving subjects):

1) Set our Canon 5D cameras to the AI Servo focus mode - which tracks a moving subject right up until the moment of exposure.

2) Choose the rapid frame advance mode.

3) Compose the scene (using our Canon 100-400mm IS lenses) with lots of space around the subject – so no important parts were cut off.

4) Choose a shooting position where the light was just right.

5) Carefully watch the background so that the subject was completely isolated.

6) Take several series of images to ensure at least one good shot.

7) Use a shutter speed of at least 1/000th of a second to freeze the action.

8) Shoot with both eyes open - so we could see if something was coming into the frame that would ruin our pictures.

9) Check all our camera settings (ISO, Image Quality, white balance, etc.) to get the best possible in-camera exposure.


• • •

Setting the specific goal beforehand, and going through the motions of taking the shot in our hotel rooms, we became comfortable with the process. When we got on site, we practiced the process again and again - before the show.

All our practicing made getting the shot relatively easy - again, because we set a specific goal.


So . . . I told this story to my students while teaching a workshop at the Light Photographic Workshops in Los Osos, CA. The next day were were going to photograph horses running on the beach.

Guess what? They all set goals . . . and they all got the shot.

Explore the light,
Rick

P.S. Here is a joke that's kinda related to setting goals: Christopher Columbus.... When he left the Old World, he did not know where he was going. When he got there, he did not know where he was. When he got back, he did not know where he had been. So much for setting goals :-)

Be My Guest Monday 12/6/10: Lee Varis

It's "Be My Guest Monday," the day of the week that's turned over to a talented guest blogger for a cool tip, trick or technique.

Today's guest: Lee Varis

Take it away, Lee!

Channel Blending for Tone Control

I'd like to share an advanced concept for tone control in Photoshop. This channel blending idea forms the basis of my 10-Channel Workflow for digital photography. Lets start with this colorful image of a sunflower (you might want to right-click and save this image so you can follow along):

sunflower

It is important to realize that all digital photographs are captured as three B&W images representing the Red, Green and Blue channels. If we examine the individual channels of this image we can see three radically different B&W renderings:

Red Channel

Red

Green Channel

Green

Blue Channel

Blue

We can take advantage of this when we create a B&W version of the color image. Go to the "Channels" panel in Photoshop and select "Split Channels" from the Channel options flyaway menu at the upper right corner of the pannel:

Split Channels

This will split the document into three separate grayscale documents representing the Red, Green and Blue channels. We can then drag one document on top of the other to creat a layer stack that we can use to blend between each "channel" layer to create a new composite rendering.

Select the "Move" tool, click in the middle of the "Green" document and drag onto the "Red" document while holding down the "Shift" Key. If you are using a "Tabbed" view in CS5, you'll have to drag onto the "Tab" for the Red document and wait for that document to come forward before letting go. Holding down the "Shift" key insures that the new layer will center over the underlying image. This alligns the layers in registration since the documents are the same size! The Green document will now be a new layer on top of the Red Background layer:

Layers-Green on Red

One easy way to "blend" the two layers (Red and Green) is to simply use the "Opacity" slider as shown above. More complicated blends can be achieved by using the layer blend modes accessed from the drop down menu under the "Layers" panel title at the upper left. By selecting "Darken" from this menu...

Darken Blend Mode

... we blend only the darker elements of the Green layer into the Red background. The only thing darker in the green layer are the petals of the flower – this way we can preserver the darker sky from the red channel:

Green Plus Red in Darken Mode

By now we should be thinking about what contribution the Blue channel document can make. Drag the Blue document ontop of the Red-Green document (using the "Move Tool" as described before)– this places the Blue document as a layer on top of both the Green and Red layers. Now... thinking outside the box, lets invert that Blue layer so everything that is dark is now light: select Image–> Adjustments–> Invert:

Invert

Inverted

Now we can multiply this over the underlying layers – change the Layers blending mode to Multiply:

Multiply Layer

The result will be an exagerated darkening of the sky that creates an infrared effect:

Infrared Effect

We can also take advantage of layer masks to further refine the blend and create a sophisticated gradient filter effect. Create a new layer mask by clicking on the layer mask icon at the bottom of the Layers panel. Then drag out a black to white gradient so that the bottom of the mask is black and the top white:

Gradient Mask

The resulting B&W rendering is something that would be impossible to create using simple contrast controls or normal B&W adjustment tools.

B&W gradient sky

Now... thinking way, way outside the box – what would happen if we could apply the lights and darks of this new B&W rendering back onto the original color image?

Flatten the image and "Save As" – re-open the original RGB version. Now drag the B&W version onto the original RGB color version using the "Move Tool" as we described before.

Something very interesting happens when we change the layer blend mode to luminosity:

Luminosity Blend

The result applies the lights and darks of the B&W layer to the color from the underlying layer and we get a dramatic new color rendering!

New Color

This new color has the dramatic gradient in the sky and enhanced contrast from the B&W version but all of the intense color saturation of the original RGB color! The strategy of working in B&W for contrast and tone separate from the color has powerful implications. We can create dramatic effects that go well beyond what was normally thought possible. Consider that any color image can exist in three different colorspaces and you'll realize that we actually have 10 B&W channels to use in even more complex blending operations...

10-channels

I have numerous advanced tutorials like this on my web site at: www.varis.com You can also find a 4-part video tutorial on the 10-Channel Workflow that goes through a more advanced image enhancement routine in the videos section. I'm also giving away a detailed 2-part PDF for Fans of my Facebook page here – click the "Like" button, sign up for the email list and I'll automatically send you the download links!

• • •

Lee Varis is the author of the best selling book Skin, as well as his latest book Mastering Exposure. I have both of these books, and highly recommend them!

Follow Lee on his blog.
Explore the light,
Rick

SoHo is SoCool


My first-ever photography exhibit opens on December 7th at the SoHo Photo Gallery in NYC.

Click here to see a quick intro movie. I actually have a total of 21 images - all hand printed by yours truly on my Canon IPF 6350.

Click here for info on the exhibit, including the opening reception - which includes free wine :-)

Explore the light,
Rick