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DeanCapture 08-11-2006 05:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vidvicious
Tommorow .. I shoot some Pinup models on the beach .. any suggestions as to the settings for my digital SLR to get that over saturated color .. with a tiny bit of yellow ( I ll be using my flash head with a gold reflexor to give that Old look) .. but would really like my color saturation to be higher ... Without Photochopin it

I shoot everything in "raw" format and convert it to jpeg using CaptureOne Pro Software. Within the conversion, I can specify the temperature of the light and make the image warmer or cooler. I can also pump up the saturation of the colors and the contrast of the image. Then, I apply that setting to all the images within the set and convert to jpeg. Easy as pie once you get the hang of it :thumbsup

DeanCapture 08-11-2006 05:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by diesel
:thumbsup
Mark II is the fucking tool :)
I cant imagine working without it now.

I agree - I love mine :winkwink:

LadyMischief 08-11-2006 06:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
Actually...not as close as most would think. The 70-200mm lens that I use will allow me to get no closer then 5 feet (approx) to the subject so those shots are done from about that distance :thumbsup


That's how you always get such amazing depth of field on those shots.. hawwwt

vidvicious 08-11-2006 06:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
I shoot everything in "raw" format and convert it to jpeg using CaptureOne Pro Software. Within the conversion, I can specify the temperature of the light and make the image warmer or cooler. I can also pump up the saturation of the colors and the contrast of the image. Then, I apply that setting to all the images within the set and convert to jpeg. Easy as pie once you get the hang of it :thumbsup


Yes I tryed that a quite a few months ago for an advertising client of mine .. I so surprised at the ease and management that a raw file has in Photoshop .. But what I was looking for is a setting ..to emulate Tungsten film being used for daylight

DeanCapture 08-12-2006 09:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vidvicious
Yes I tryed that a quite a few months ago for an advertising client of mine .. I so surprised at the ease and management that a raw file has in Photoshop .. But what I was looking for is a setting ..to emulate Tungsten film being used for daylight

Hmmmm, it's possible that you could tweak out a setting or two to emulate that look but I'm not aware of how to do that. I've spent the last year or so fine-tuning my digital raw workflow so that I could get a more consistant look with my work and that's the only way I shoot now. I prefer to just record a nice clean, well-exposed and well-compositioned image and manipulate the color in post (the same way they do in the movie industry with major motion pictures). With all the photoshop plugins available, you should have no problem tweaking out the color of your images to your exact specifications and then running a batch process. Just some thoughts......

Gerco 08-12-2006 10:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
Hmmmm, it's possible that you could tweak out a setting or two to emulate that look but I'm not aware of how to do that. I've spent the last year or so fine-tuning my digital raw workflow so that I could get a more consistant look with my work and that's the only way I shoot now. I prefer to just record a nice clean, well-exposed and well-compositioned image and manipulate the color in post (the same way they do in the movie industry with major motion pictures). With all the photoshop plugins available, you should have no problem tweaking out the color of your images to your exact specifications and then running a batch process. Just some thoughts......

Care to share the work flow? Maybe even the setting your using? I have been shooting RAW with the D2x, converting using Bibble Pro. Rairly if ever go into photoshop. Im intersted in things like, which color space do you shoot in, All the little fun stuff :) I find Meta tag info great since you can look a t a picture you enjoy and SEE the settings that where used.

I'm a self taught photographier, So there is a SHITLOAD that I don't know. Basically I learned what I know cause I had to. I have been looking for a course, or school that I could goto, or even someone I could shoot with to learn more as I'm finding that as I get into it deeper the more I enjoy about it. Know of any good people or places one would goto for training/apprenticeship? I have been thinking of taking some stuff by David Mecey http://davidmecey.com/index.html but would also be interested to find out any more contacts of people that train.

johnny o 08-12-2006 10:24 AM

can i be you?

Ivana Fukalot 08-12-2006 10:34 AM

Beautiful pics. :thumbsup

DeanCapture 08-12-2006 10:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gerco
Care to share the work flow? Maybe even the setting your using? I have been shooting RAW with the D2x, converting using Bibble Pro. Rairly if ever go into photoshop. Im intersted in things like, which color space do you shoot in, All the little fun stuff :) I find Meta tag info great since you can look a t a picture you enjoy and SEE the settings that where used.

I'm a self taught photographier, So there is a SHITLOAD that I don't know. Basically I learned what I know cause I had to. I have been looking for a course, or school that I could goto, or even someone I could shoot with to learn more as I'm finding that as I get into it deeper the more I enjoy about it. Know of any good people or places one would goto for training/apprenticeship? I have been thinking of taking some stuff by David Mecey http://davidmecey.com/index.html but would also be interested to find out any more contacts of people that train.

Gerco, I've spent hundreds of hours experimenting, learning and fine-tuning my digital workflow process and because I've spent so much time, energy and money figuring it all out.....I wouldn't be comfortable laying it all out here for everyone to see. If you REALLY want to get to a new level with your work, you need to put some effort into reading everything you can get your hands on about digital workflow. I have several books that I've picked up over the last year that go into great detail regarding all the things you mentioned. In fact, any good digital workflow book will have that info. This is one of those things that - "the more you put into it, the more you get out of it"!

In regards to the David Mecey Workshop - if you can afford to take that workshop...you should go for it. David is an excellent Photographer and a very talented teacher. I took a workshop from him many years ago and it was money well spent!

Gerco 08-12-2006 10:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
Gerco, I've spent hundreds of hours experimenting, learning and fine-tuning my digital workflow process and because I've spent so much time, energy and money figuring it all out.....I wouldn't be comfortable laying it all out here for everyone to see. If you REALLY want to get to a new level with your work, you need to put some effort into reading everything you can get your hands on about digital workflow. I have several books that I've picked up over the last year that go into great detail regarding all the things you mentioned. In fact, any good digital workflow book will have that info. This is one of those things that - "the more you put into it, the more you get out of it"!

In regards to the David Mecey Workshop - if you can afford to take that workshop...you should go for it. David is an excellent Photographer and a very talented teacher. I took a workshop from him many years ago and it was money well spent!

I met David years back during an Internex in Vegas. Super nice guy. A friend of mine (Anton) has taken many of Davids workshops and has always said the greatest things about him. Truthfully, I'm at the point where I feel I can't afford NOT to take the next step and join some of his classes. I have an ever growing collection of books, everything I can get my hands one and I spend a great deal of time reading, But I still find that I need actual hands on, "to SEE it done" The cost of his course really is small if you compare it to what I have sitting here in equipment. Equipment that I know I would get a LOT more use out of if I knew exactly what to do with it :)

SinisterStudios 08-12-2006 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
If your camera has a histogram, learn to use it. You can find a lot of info about how to read histograms all over the internet. I use a handheld meter for all my shoots to ensure correct exposure, but always back those readings up with my "in-camera" histogram.

http://www.cleanimages.com/articles/.../Histogram.jpg


This is some of the best advice anyone can give about getting the proper shot, your histograph will show you if your too dark,too light, or right on and thats 90% of the battle right there.

Im shooting with 4 - 1000watt Dyna-lites and 2 - 2000 watt power packs, how many lights do you use for indoor shoots? And do you use all natural light for your outdoor shoots or a portable system and bounce boards?

SinisterStudios 08-12-2006 11:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
I currently use the Canon 1D Mark II but with some photo-knowledge you could shoot those pics with any pro-am digital SLR camera (IMO).

Love the Mark II, expensive as fuck with all the lenses but to get the quality you need it is a must. 90 megs a raw image sucks too, we have started to use wireless Hard Drive storage units because we were filling 4 gb storage cards so fast.

DeanCapture 08-12-2006 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SinisterStudios
This is some of the best advice anyone can give about getting the proper shot, your histograph will show you if your too dark,too light, or right on and thats 90% of the battle right there.

Im shooting with 4 - 1000watt Dyna-lites and 2 - 2000 watt power packs, how many lights do you use for indoor shoots? And do you use all natural light for your outdoor shoots or a portable system and bounce boards?

I don't have a set number of lights that I use all the time. Sometimes I'll use one light - sometimes I'll use 6. It just depends on what kind of look I'm going for and how much time I have to set it all up. I have to shoot a certain number of sets per day so time constraints play a big part of my decision on how much lighting I use. In regards to my outdoor stuff, I will usually use some flash along with the natural light.

DeanCapture 08-12-2006 11:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SinisterStudios
Love the Mark II, expensive as fuck with all the lenses but to get the quality you need it is a must. 90 megs a raw image sucks too, we have started to use wireless Hard Drive storage units because we were filling 4 gb storage cards so fast.

I have many 1gig cards and I will typically shoot 1 set of pics per card...switch cards and shoot another set and continue that thruout the day. The cards are immediately dumped into my laptop or my Epson P-2000 digital wallet :winkwink:

aztecboi2003 08-12-2006 12:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeanCapture
I currently use the Canon 1D Mark II but with some photo-knowledge you could shoot those pics with any pro-am digital SLR camera (IMO).

Could those type of images be achieved with a Canon Pro1?

DeanCapture 08-12-2006 01:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aztecboi2003
Could those type of images be achieved with a Canon Pro1?

I don't have any experience with the Pro1 but I've been thinking about picking me up one. They look like they'd be fun to shoot :winkwink:

I really don't believe that it makes much difference what kind of equipment your using - more importantly is what you do with it. I use top of the line gear because Photography is my love, my life and my passion - but I believe that I could shoot some nice stuff with just a point-n-shoot if I had to :thumbsup


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