Monday, September 14, 2009

Get the Shot

This is a basic shot you can get with almost any camera - and no expensive lighting equipment.


We were in the middle of town...without a lot clean background choices so we chose to work in the street. The shot needed a little clean up, but it took only a few minutes in PSE. Want to get the shot right in the first place? Here's a great article on choosing the best background.

The big key to this shot is exposure. You are going to need to make sure that you expose for the subject. In a central shot like this, even with your camera in auto, you should be able to lock exposure and focus on the centralized subject by pressing your shutter button halfway. If you are in auto and the subject isn't centered you will run into problems. Want to step out of auto mode? Check out these great tutorials at DPS here.

Setting up the shot:
You will need to make sure the subject is backlit by having them stand in front of a bright source. In this case, the sun (it was about 3 hours after sunrise, but any time before that would work great too). Expose for the subject and click away.
SOOC:
SOOC

Making the shot pop:
I had a good friend take this shot for me after I set the camera, so I chose to crop tighter and clean up distracting elements in the background. I also increased blacks in camera RAW to add a liitle of the contrast lost to flare. No camera RAW...just adjust the black point on a levels adjustment. I then used the elliptical selection tool set at 250px feather to create a light vignette around the entire shot (on a new layer). I erased most of the vignette that overlapped the subject and used the same color at a low opacity to paint over any other background areas that needed lightening to get this photo here. Finally, I added a gradient map layer set to black and white and decreased the opacity to let a little color show through. I did the same thing with a sepia layer to warm up the shot.
Final Product:
Original Background

Another variation:
I wanted a second version with a little more grit so I added a texture over the edited version. To add the texture, I opened my image and the texture in PSE. Copy/pasted the texture over my image. Resized the texture to fit by dragging the corners with the move tool, and finally adjusted the blend mode to multiply and decreased the opacity. I did this twice with 2 textures to get the desired results. You can pick up the textures by skeletalmess and pareerica free here:
www.flickr.com/photos/8078381@N03/3817596316/ www.flickr.com/photos/skeletalmess/3331754345/

Final with texture:
Texture Background
You should also play with the blend modes with different textures and images to get the best results. Check out this excellent tutorial on adding texture for a more in depth look and clearer explanation.

2 comments:

  1. wow this is awesome... i will visit your blog now more often!! :D

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  2. Wow....thank you for the tutorials!!! I am on a crash course of learning. I will be learning from you!!!! Thank you for sharing. xxxRobby

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