Learning Portrait Photography Lighting
The Easy Way!
By: Danny Eitreim
Whether
you're a photography newbie or you've been around
the block a few times, it doesn't take long to learn
that properly lighting a portrait subject can make a
huge difference in the quality of the finished
portrait.
Thus begins the never ending torment.
First, we wonder what kind of lighting patterns
there are.
We go to our local camera store and discover a book
that discusses Rembrandt light. Then another guru
says that narrow light is the way to go. But for
each narrow light application, there's another time
when broad light will do the trick. They talk about
split light, backlight, hair light, fill, ambient.
They use terms like main light, key light, fill,
diffused, hot, continuous, strobe and so on...
It's no wonder so many people throw up their hands
in frustration. Then they light every subject the
same tired old way.
So then, we start to question - why bother?
What difference does it make?
We soon learn that wide faces can be visually
narrowed, narrow faces can be visually widened,
noses can be shortened, cheekbones can be raised.
Not to mention - blemishes can be minimized,
wrinkles softened and weight reduced.
Then it finally hits. Lighting is important. We
start to realize that being a photographer entails
more than buying the latest digital gadget and
spending countless hours in Photoshop.
By now we are in information overload. Which way to
turn? How many hundreds of dollars do we need to
spend - buying all the latest magazines and photo
books?
There
is an easier way.
It's true that photo equipment is being improved all
the time. Trying to keep up with all the most recent
improvements in technology is impossibly difficult -
but - peoples faces are pretty much the same now as
they were 10 years ago, 50 years, 100.
The best lighting patterns haven't changed.
Rembrandt light is called that because Rembrandt
used that lighting pattern! In the early 1600's!
The point is, to learn the basic lighting patterns,
old photo books work just as well as the new ones.
You don't have to spend a fortune at the local
camera store, book store or on line. Go to the
library. It's free.
Find a book that shows a lighting pattern you want
to learn, check it out and go home.
Now comes the expensive part.
You need some flashlights. I mean the kind you hold
in your hand. The kind you keep in the kitchen junk
drawer. (Yes, the one that always has dead batteries
when you need it.) You will also need a notebook.
Now, for the fun part. Grab one of your kids,
boyfriend, girlfriend, next door neighbor, next door
neighbor's kids...somebody! Bribe them. Tell them if
they'll help you learn about lighting, you'll do a
nice portrait of them!
Have them sit on a chair in a darkened room. (Leave
your camera in the bag. We don't need it.) Take out
your flashlights and starting with one (add more as
needed)- light up their face. Move it in and out,
raise it, lower it, go to the sides and so on.
Watch what is happening! Learn how to exaggerate and
minimize noses, bumps, acne, wrinkles. Learn where
the light needs to be positioned to get the patterns
in the book.
What happens when you put some tracing paper over
the light? Bounce it off a nearby wall?
Then for each new discovery you make, write it down
in your notebook. Use plenty of diagrams.
In a couple hours, you'll know more about
photographic lighting than 75% of all the
photographers out there. Plus, you can have a great
time!
Dan Eitreim has been a professional photographer in
southern California for over 16 years. His data base
exceeds 6000 past clients, and he says that selling
YOUR photography is easy - if you only know a couple
tried and true marketing strategies. He's created a
multimedia presentation that can teach ANYONE how to
sell their own photography and generate freelance
income in as little as two weeks. To learn more and
enroll in a FREE photo marketing course, go to:
http://www.PartTimePhotography.com
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