this is a very good post about the better use of light for indoor photography. The involvement of kids and pets is also very nice and the tips were also good. Thanks ,keep updating. medical billing
Bohm & Marrazzo Bring Digital To Kids And Pets; Shooting Indoors And Out Requires A Flexible Approach Page 2
Bohm continues: "If you look at the photograph of the three children on the beach, we have a light which mimics sunlight--the Broncolor Satellite Reflector. For that shot, we wanted it to look like it was shot outdoors." To achieve that effect, they first photographed the beach scene with the Hasselblad at the Jersey Shore. Then they brought 750 lbs of sand into the studio and recreated the beach scene for the portrait session. The final image is a digital composite.
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Quick Tips
When it comes to photographing kids, two other assignments reflect Bohm and
Marrazzo's mastery of their craft. On one assignment for EK Success (a
scrapbooking company), they had to photograph a mother and baby, nose to nose.
Total strangers to each other, the two models instantly developed a rapport.
How? Bohm explains: "What's very important with a photograph like
this is that you cast an adult who is good with children, because babies know
the difference. If this woman did not like this child, we would not have gotten
this photograph." The picture itself was shot against a seamless white
backdrop, with the window (from their stock library) later dropped in. They
used the Canon 1Ds with the 70-200mm for the main shot. Almost forgot...
The studio doesn't use wranglers with kids: when either Bohm or Marrazzo
is behind the camera, the other is doing what's needed to get the child's
attention. In this instance, one of them was standing above the mother's
head, making noises to attract the baby's attention.
Next we come to an ad for a diaper company called Arquest. Not every diaper
ad has to have a diaper in it. Of course, trends change, but here the focus
was on the baby and the kitten. "We told the cat to stay there,"
Bohm recalls, "and said to the little girl, `Look, the kitty cat's
in there.' And of course you have to let things progress naturally from
that moment." This was shot with the Hasselblad and Leaf back, with a
150mm lens, with lighting from the Lucifero Window Light, plus a collapsible
reflector for fill and another light on the background. The softboxes here allowed
them to light a broader area, which gives kids room to move around on a set.
Jack Neubart is the author of numerous books on photography. His latest book is "Photographer's Exposure Handbook" (Amphoto, 2007).
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