

And the gridded beautydish on a boom above. And Jessica.Īnd me, of course, jammed in between the camera and the big softbox and a large reflector in front of me. Almost no shadows, or gradients or anything like that.Ī gridded white Profoto Softlight Reflector and a 5 foot Softbox Octa, and a silver reflector. After some research on the net, I decided to use a very open and up-against-the-wall type of setup.
#Gridded beauty dish how to#
I’m guessing few – if any – portraits of him exist with his specks on, and it would have been great to capture him with a unique look.When a Swedish publishing house needed portraits of an illustrator named Jessica they called me, and I started thinking about how to light her. Thinking back now I feel like I should have attempted one set of images with is glasses on. His campaign defies a lot of “historical rules” and I wanted his image to stand out in that way from the others in the series. The only exception so far has been ron paul’s portrait… and there is a reason for that.

These images are my interpretation of these individuals as I see them – and I see this world horizontally.
#Gridded beauty dish series#
With many of my portraits in this series I’ve been told that framing things as a vertical crop instead of a horizontal would “vastly improve the image.” I would tend to agree if these were going to be pretty head shots for a press release or personal biography, but they’re not. That variable that turns a photo from cheesy and boring to interesting and thoughtful. This was actually the very last frame i made, and it’s got the x-factor I look for in all of my work. I’ve now learned that photographing somebody that’s been in front of the camera most of his life can be a very difficult thing. I’m incredibly happy with it, but it’s the only one. This was the only frame from the 6 or 7 that I made that I was happy with. Looked serious into the center of my lens and I snapped the last frame. Clearly I cared about the photo if i had taken the time to research his book.īefore clicking the last frame it I asked him to think about one thought or emotion he feels his book most represents. He immediately relaxed. I wanted to get his mind off the giant camera in his face and let him instantly know I wasn’t someone that was there to get paid and leave. I could tell it made him a tad uncomfortable, so I lowered my camera and told him I liked his chapter about journalism in the internet age and the need for more partnerships in the industry. I got in pretty close with the 50mm lens and I noticed him starting to lean a bit away from me. He looked at me with little expectation and immediately gave me a forced smile. It was obvious he’d done this hundreds if not thousands of times. Brokaw stepped in front of my camera he instinctively knew to take off his glasses off. Brokaw totally isolated with no distraction so his eyes intensely pull you into the portrait… much like his book was a hard look at America and such.Īs Mr. The ambient light in the room was dark enough (combined with my 10x ND Filter) that I could make it pitch black without any flash. The beauty dish is gridded so virtually no light spilled behind him and the side light is also a gridded soft box. I was in a bigger room so I had space to setup far from any wall. The lighting was my usual approach, but I did position the lights in a way that would basically allow the background to be completely black. I wanted to get an idea about what he was promoting and what he had to say. When I learned that he’d be attending I immediately picked up his book and started reading through it. You probably saw him on a talk show or two (including one of my favs… the daily show) but one of the stops along the way was the National Press Club for a luncheon. Tom Brokaw recently released a book titled The Time of Our Lives and was making media appearances all over the place. Brokaw’s attitude and seriousness that he relates throughout his new book which is essentially a hard look and serious discussion about America’s current state and future. Rim light is a gridded 10″ x 36″ Stripbox – far camera right.Ĭreate drastic subject isolation by utilizing sharply gridded lights to provide light falloff.Ĭreate a portrait that touches on Mr. Light Modifiers: Key light is gridded 22″ silver beauty dish – camera left. Light Sources: 2 Einstein 640 WS by Paul C.
