Paul Lender

About Left of Center Photography

A behind the scenes look at what goes in to making Left of Center Photographer one of the Cleveland areas most fun and interesting photographers.

Archive: June, 2010



Editing

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

People say to me all the time “How did you get that photo to look like that?”

Actually (doh!) nobody has ever said that, but I thought I’d do a little post on how I edit from straight out of camera to finished file.

So here is the shot of Carter and Paige sitting a on log down by Lake Erie as it came SOOC.  I leave a bit of padding so that I can grab an a variety of crops.  I learned early on that filling the frame is awesome, but sometimes it can leave you hanging when you get to the dreaded 8 x 10 crop.

That’s a wide shot with the Canon 20mm f/2.8.  It’s a new lens and I’m trying to shoot it as much as possible so that I get to know it.  I knew it would work great in this composition.  I also spiced things up with off camera flash.  I wanted to bring the sky in for the background and catch that little sliver of light just above the horizon.  Shooting without a flash would have left me with no choice but to blow the background out while getting a decent exposure on their faces.  In this case the light is a 580EX II just off camera right and triggered with Pocket Wizard Mini tt1 and Flex tt5 – but not on ETTL – I was running manual mode.

I already had the idea in my mind that these would end up as B/W shots, but I still went through the process in color.  All the editing is done in Light Room unless I need to swap out heads or something :)   First, I knocked the exposure down around a 1/2 stop, maybe 1/4.  Then I increased the contrast to the “strong” curve and finally I through in the LR “Punch” action.  I also warmed up the white balance.  Lastly, I cropped it to the little bit nicer composition.  Total edit time – about one minute.

Like I said, I had a vision of the shot being in B/W so I hit up the LR “High Contrast B/W” action and tweaked out the exposure setting the blacks to get my final image.  Really, this is a pretty solid color shot and I almost left it that way, but the beauty of digital is that you can play with a lot of options.

Behind the Scenes – Sports Portraits

Friday, June 4th, 2010

It’s a summer tradition, or fall, depending on what sport your child plays.  Opening Day rolls around and it’s team photo time.  Usually you end up with something looking like this or maybe this.

Really there is no reason you shouldn’t have this…

All Star - Baseball

All Star - Softball

All Star - Baseball

And it’s just a simple three light setup. I’m sure the photographer shooting your league has the lights. I know ours does. He sets up four so he can make boring portraits twice as fast on two different backdrops. Really, the setup I used above (and shown below) can plug and chug kids out just as fast as those two lights set up to give that flat, traditional look do.

Sports Portrait Setup

I used to medium/small umbrellas and a large softbox, but any three lights will do. The quality of the rim will change if you go with no modifiers or larger modifiers. Same for the fill with the front. Once the lights are in place, it’s just a matter of firing away.

If I had more time, I would have gone with a grey background, but 9PM at night, after two games, and the mosquitoes beginning to eat us alive I took what I could get.  Grey would have helped out with a little more separation around the tops of their heads

Oh yeah, so why don’t I take the team photos? Hmmmm…..

 

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