Tangents

photography tutorials, reviews & workshops

tangents photography blog
learn : discuss : share
  • Tangents
  • Tutorials
    • Flash Photography
    • Wedding Photography
    • Studio Photography
    • Posing People
    • Understanding Your Camera
    • Exposure metering
    • BFT
    • Best Photo Books
  • Reviews
    • Sony
    • Nikon
    • Canon
    • Fuji
    • Profoto
    • lighting gear
  • Workshops
    • Info: Workshops
    • In-person
      tutoring sessions
    • Online
      tutoring sessions
    • Workshops in
      New Jersey (NJ)
    • Workshops in
      New York (NYC)
    • Photo walks in NYC
    • Studio Workshop
    • Video tutorials
    • Workshop results
  • Books
    • On-Camera Flash (revised ed.)
    • Direction & Quality of Light
    • Off-Camera Flash Photography
    • Lighting & Design
    • On-Camera Flash (1st ed.)
  • Projects
    • Two Perspectives
    • B&W Infrared
    • Vintage lenses
    • Time-lapse photography
  • Info
    • About
    • Contact
    • My Photo Gear
    • Books by NvN
    • Join us on Facebook
    • Acclaim
    • Success Stories

Photo session – Modern Gypsies – golden birds

August 1, 2013 Neil vN 9 Comments

Photo session – Modern Gypsies – golden birds

Another series from the recent publicity photo session with the Modern Gypsies, with two of the girls in costume, as golden birds. With costumes this detailed and complex, I wanted a simpler background. One that didn’t intrude, and somehow complemented the subjects. Classic architecture!

Here are the behind-the-scenes images to how we came to some killer photographs for them …

We started half a block away from where we were going to shoot, getting ready in the street. This of course gets a lot of attention from the passersby on this busy Manhattan Street. But on this day, there was a distraction of people loudly arguing and shoving each other two shop-fronts away. Interesting how something like the two girls getting ready in these costumes, aren’t the most interesting thing happening right there and then.

On the steps of the post office – the destination I had in mind for this part of the photo session.

The lighting was the portable and trustworthy Profoto Acute B2 600 Ws powerpack  (affiliate) with a Profoto beauty dish (affiliate) and a sock over the beauty dish.

 

For comparison, here is the available light shot so you can see the effect of the flash.

The photograph, pretty much straight out of camera, except for a slight tweak of the color balance.

camera settings: 1/100 @ f/8 @ 800 ISO

Since the theme is Golden Birds, I wanted the final photograph to be much warmer than the neutral image. So I snazzed it up in post-processing, using a Photoshop filter.

I also did closer-up shots of each of the two performers. Again, the image was post-processed to give it a really warm tone.

camera settings:  1/160 @ f/4.0 @ 800 ISO

And for comparison, the photo without lighting from the Profoto setup, and the photograph un-processed.

 

Photo gear (or equivalents) used in this photo session

  • Nikon D4
  • Nikon 24-70mm f2.8G AF-S  /  Canon 24-70mm f/2.8L II
  • Nikon 70-200mm f2.8 AF-S VR II  /  Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II
  • Profoto Acute B2 600 Ws power pack
    or alternately, the Profoto B1 500 Ws portable flash
  • Profoto beauty dish with a 22″ sock for a beauty dish
  • Manfrotto 1004BAC – tall light-stand

 

More of this photo session

  • Modern Gypsies – Silver Birds
  • Modern Gypsies – floating bubbles
  • Modern Gypsies – stilt-walking Showgirl

 

More info about the Modern Gypsies

  • Modern Gypsies website
  • Modern Gypsies Productions on Facebook

 

A little bit of homework

  • Why did my assistant pull back the flash and point it slightly upward, instead of directly at the subjects?

 

Filed Under: Modern Gypsies, off-camera flash, photo shoot, Profoto Tagged With: off-camera flash, photo session New York


 

Help support this website

If you find these articles of value, please help support this website by using these B&H and Amazon affiliate links to order your photo gear.

I also offer photography workshops and tutoring sessions, whether in person, or via online video tutoring sessions.

Please follow me on Instagram for more.

You can also join our thriving photo community in the Tangents group on Facebook, where we show our photos and discuss all things photography.

Thank you,

Neil vN

Books by Neil van Niekerk


 




9 Comments, Add Your Own

  1. 1Helen Orcutt says

    August 1, 2013 at 4:33 pm

    The transformation is amazing. Thank you for sharing your work and breaking it down step by step.

    Reply
  2. 2Rudy says

    August 1, 2013 at 6:04 pm

    These rock Neil…and it was all available light!

    Reply
  3. 3Rudy says

    August 1, 2013 at 7:24 pm

    HW: to feather the light

    Reply
  4. 4Mark S says

    August 1, 2013 at 7:33 pm

    Hi Neil,

    Thanks for sharing – I always enjoy your BTS blog posts. Just wondering, why did you not use your new Westcott Rapid Box instead? Why this beauty dish… So far away from the girls?

    Reply
  5. 5Neil vN says

    August 1, 2013 at 7:46 pm

    I used the Profoto during the entire day. I used it instead of a speedlight, because I knew I’d be working in very bright sunlight at some point. Then a speedlight just doesn’t quite cut it compared to the much higher-powered Profoto.

    – Modern Gypsies – Silver Birds
    – Modern Gypsies – floating bubbles
    – Modern Gypsies – stilt-walking Showgirl

    Regarding the distance – I wanted to get sweeping wide-angle shots as well, which would include the architecture. So I had to move the flash setup back.

    Reply
  6. 6Mike Zurynski says

    August 1, 2013 at 10:53 pm

    Ditto the light feather… force the fall off to the bottom and maybe sparkle the pillars a lil bit. LOVE the post production Neil!

    Reply
  7. 7oscar says

    August 1, 2013 at 11:02 pm

    Great shots!

    Hw: he pulled back the light because the subjects are not equal distance from the light, so using the inverse square law if you back of the light, there will be “deeper” areas where both of them will be evenly lit. He tilted it up to feather the light and avoid a hot spot.

    Reply
  8. 8Neil vN says

    August 1, 2013 at 11:06 pm

    Yup on feathering the light, so that there is less light on the foreground. Otherwise the foreground would be over-lit.

    The inverse square law doesn’t quite kick in with this though.

    Reply
  9. 9Anthony M says

    August 4, 2013 at 11:56 am

    Hello Neil, I know this is off topic but I was hoping you could shed some light about photography permits in NJ and NY. When using a lighting setup like this are there specific locations where it’s easier to shoot withought a ridiculously expensive permit or are there ways around it (eg handheld strobes+assistant vs light stands). Any examples of specific locations would be greatly appreciated! I continuosly find myself in situations where I would have to pay several hundred dollars and wait weeks for a permit to do an engagement shoot in NJ (eg Hoboken). All I ever use is a quadra and a soft box….

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Rudy Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

categories

Articles & Tutorials

  • • About myself & this site
    • Books by Neil vN
    • Best photography books
    • Black foamie thing
    • Photographers’ success stories
  • • Flash Photography Techniques
    • Natural looking flash
    • Flash + Ambient light
    • Dragging the shutter
    • Bouncing your flash
    • On-camera flash outdoors
    • Exposure metering
    • Flash exposure compensation
    • Bounce flash examples
    • Which is the best flashgun?
    • Flash brackets
    • Off-camera flash photography
    • Flash photography basics
    • Using video lights
    • Flash photography tips
  • • Photography workshops NJ / NYC
    • Models @ photography workshops
tutorials:
flash photography
Photography
Workshops

All rights reserved. Copyright © Neil van Niekerk 2025 · Customization by The Traveling Designer

Copyright © 2025 · NvN on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in