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photography: finding interesting available light

October 7, 2010 Neil vN 10 Comments

photography: using interesting found light / available light

Photographing Kerri in an alley that I’ve used a few times before, I was looking for other interesting angles and backgrounds. This one stretch of white-washed wall was particularly bland … but then I noticed small splashes of light …

The sunlight reflecting off the windows on the opposite wall, was throwing interesting rectangular patterns on the white wall.

I decided to position Kerri in one of those splashes of light.  This immediately created a much bolder image. The near mono-chromatic tones of the wall and the dress, now draws attention to the areas with color – her arms, shoulders and face.

In this way, I often look for interesting available light.  But what if you can’t find available light that is interesting or dramatic? Well, then you just create your own:

equipment used during this session:

Nikon D3; Nikon 70-200mm f2.8 AF-S VR II (B&H)

Filed Under: available light photography, lighting, technique Tagged With: available light photography, photography technique


 

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10 Comments, Add Your Own

  1. 1John says

    October 8, 2010 at 4:39 am

    Hi Neil

    I personally just wanted to thank you FREELY contributing your time, knowledge & expertise with us all. Your tangents are MOST interesting & informative. Your principles of “sowing & reaping” is clearly evident. Keep up the GREAT work.

    PS! Wish you’d pop back in to South Africa for a workshop :)

    Regards

    John Botha

    Reply
  2. 2Kevin says

    October 8, 2010 at 5:07 am

    You are the quintessential generous giver of great lighting knowledge on the net…

    Thank you ;-)

    Reply
  3. 3Alex says

    October 8, 2010 at 7:07 am

    Thank you very much for your wonderful posts.Please keep posting more.Neil it`s one of the best!,best!,best! and more best!Thank you!

    Reply
  4. 4Dragos says

    October 8, 2010 at 7:11 am

    Now is the moment when I have to say that every day I’d write to Neil thanks for what it does, and like me – certainly many more. Just to know, Neil… From all my heart, Thank you.

    Reply
  5. 5Sheri J says

    October 8, 2010 at 7:37 am

    I always appreciate the back story and the images to go along with it.

    Reply
  6. 6John says

    October 8, 2010 at 2:04 pm

    Neil
    Great shots and I to have learned much from your teachings, Thanks.
    On the last shot above did you use a spot meter or matrix ?
    Just thinking about the light and dark area. If spot was it maybe 1/2 stop plus for the skin tone.
    Thanks again.

    John

    Reply
  7. 7Neil vN says

    October 9, 2010 at 2:00 am

    John the last shot isn’t just available light. The wall to the left is available light. The model was lit by off-camera flash.

    I started off by selectively metering off the wall to get my basic exposure .. and then I added unmodified (ie, direct) off-camera TTL flash to light up the model.

    Reply
  8. 8Curtis says

    October 18, 2010 at 7:44 am

    Neil,

    Great work as always. I’ve noticed in some of your recent posts you have some color fringing (not sure if that is the technical term) going on. As a fellow Nikon D3 shooter, I had the same thing happen from my Lightroom RAW processing using the Nikon Color Profiles. I assume that is what you are using as well. They are very accurate to the LCD and close to what Capture NX does but that color issue, seen here in your first image where the white brick has a purple/green cast to it, is unavoidable with those profiles. I recently found an updated version of the profiles that corrects it and I now get the best looking files I’ve ever had. Here is the link to it: https://forums.adobe.com/thread/602274

    I highly recommend you give them a try. The highlights become a little brighter but the color cast is gone completely. Just thought I’d point it out in case you were as frustrated by it as I was.

    Keep up the great work!

    Curtis

    Reply
  9. 9Neil vN says

    October 18, 2010 at 11:24 am

    Curtis, thank you, I will check it out. I thought it was some kind of posterization from inadvertently setting my Raw files to process as 8-bit images instead of 16-bit images. Not sure how and when I changed that setting to 8-bit. Anyhow I will check out those profiles.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  10. 10Stephen says

    October 18, 2010 at 1:31 pm

    I didn’t even notice the posterization in that first image. Is the posterization a serious issue?

    This situation seems like the story that Neil talked about regarding noise in wedding images. The photographer notices it, but the client doesn’t even notice or care about it, because the composition is engaging.

    Reply

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