May 20, 2008 at 8:13 pm
· Filed under ambient light, headshot

Recently I’ve been shooting a lot of headshots, and am finding myself really enjoying this type of photography. Perhaps it has to do with those windows to the soul — the eyes. Getting these tight headshots gives the person viewing the photograph an excellent view into those windows.
I had been using many off-camera strobes for lighting the previous headshots I’ve taken in the past, which generally means I must stop down my lens into the f/8-f/11 range and thus increasing my depth of field. Which is perfectly fine for a portrait or corporate headshot. With this photo session, I decided to try something different , using the giant softbox that Mother Nature provided — gray cloud-filled skies — and a white foamcore board just below the subject to fill in the shadows. This allowed me to use my 135mm lens at f/2, with a sliver of DOF, and really concentrate on getting the eyes tack sharp to draw the viewer immediately to the eyes.
I’m going to use this technique much more in the future.
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May 7, 2008 at 5:05 am
· Filed under headshot, off-camera flash
Monday afternoon I was contracted to photograph seven corporate principals and assistant principals for a local engineering firm. Companies use these type of images for their websites, annual reports, press releases, company publications, etc.
The headshots were taken on-location so not to interrupt their daily workload.
The setup for these photographs was an Alien Bee 800 with large softbox camera right, with a reflector camera left for fill. I also place a foamcore board on table in front of subjects to help fill in light under the chin. I used a blue paper backdrop with an Alien Bee 400 and 40-degree grid to create the background light.
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May 3, 2008 at 10:10 am
· Filed under PERSONAL WORK, headshot, off-camera flash

On Monday, I am shooting corporate headshots for a client, so yesterday I was setting up a new lighting scheme from techniques I learned from the Lighting-Essentials workshop I attended last month.
I was resorting to setting a timer on my camera and then running over to the chair to capture myself in the frame to check my lighting. Luckily, after only a few laps from camera to chair and back, my son came home from work. He is on the grounds crew at Mountain Branch Golf Course in Joppa. Of course he was all sweaty and wanted a shower, but he was more than happy to sit in for a couple test shots.
There is something about this image I really like, and I thought I’d share.
This is taken with a large softbox to camera right and a white foamboard camera left. I had a second light with grid hitting the background from left to right. I normally would have the backlight directly behind the subject, but in this test setup I was limited on the amount of space between the subject and the backdrop.
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August 29, 2007 at 7:07 pm
· Filed under headshot, off-camera flash
The sun is a wonderful light source — especially in the early morning or late afternoon. But if the sun is coming in from the side, you get some pretty dark shadows on the opposite side.
Inspired by the images of Brent Williamson I decided to try a bit of crosslighting this afternoon.
With the beautiful warm late afternoon sun to work with shining onto the subject from the right, I setup a 580EX off to the left about 15 feet away at 1/32 power. Triggered using pocket wizards, the direct flash put just enough light into the dark shadow areas for a pleasing photograph. The idea is to use the flash in a very subtle way as to not even look like flash was used.
This is a very simple setup. If you don’t have pocket wizards, an off-camera sync cord will work just as well.
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