White Background Lighting Tutorial for Portraits or Product Shots

Often, when you shoot subjects on a pure white background, the background doesn’t turn out truly white. This can work well if that’s the look you’re going for, but what if you really want your background white? According to advertising photographer Joe Edelman, it’s a simple fix:

Though some photographers shy away from shooting subjects on pure white backgrounds, there’s actually quite a lot that can be done with them. The blank background means that all the focus will be exclusively on your subject, and if you’re doing product photography this is exactly what you want. It’s also an essential component for high-key photography, and it works really well with certain types of portrait and beauty shots.

White backgrounds need to be lit separately from the subject in order to be kept a true white, and for Edelman, the simplest way to do this is to use a softbox as the background. The bigger the softbox, the more workability you have with how you place your subject. With Edelman’s technique you simple put the subject directly in front of the softbox (or 5′ Octodone in this case) and light with a key light as usual.

How to set up the lighting

If you’re working in a tight space, using a smaller softbox works just as well. In this shot Edelman is using a 24×32″ softbox, and he still gets a lot of working room with his subject’s head and upper torso. This setup is not only extremely compact, it’s also quite portable and easy to set up.

Using a smaller softbox in a tight space

Gear Used

Settings

Edelman first plugs in his settings–in this case ISO 64 (his camera’s native ISO) and a shutter speed of 1/200 of a second. With a blank background there’s no reason to shoot wide open, so Edelman narrows down his aperture to something between f/6.3 and f/8 to make sure that the entire subject is in focus, even if they turn their head.

Next, he sets the exposure. Most people would use a light meter, but Edelman prefers a different technique involving the Image Highlights or “blinky” feature on his camera. (This can be found in either your histogram settings or display settings in your camera’s menu.) To do it his way, turn your strobe up to full power and take a test shot with the “blinky feature” turned on. You should have the whole background blinking. Turn down the strobe a full stop and take another test shot. Keep doing this until your test shot shows only part of the background blinking. Go back to the stop before that and you’ll have an evenly lit, not over-exposed white background for the settings you punched into your camera.

The result? Beautiful portraits that focus entirely on the subject.

Working with Pure White Backgrounds

You can, of course, choose to over-expose your background, but this will give you a fairly low contrast shot that will need a bit more work in post production. Still, with Edelman’s technique of reflecting the light back onto his subject (using a cardboard cut-out!), you can get some great black and white art shots.

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