Susan and Greg
tenoverthenose
Registered Users Posts: 815 Major grins
Susan and Greg are an older couple that have each been married before, but found something in each other that they never found before. I love weddings like this where you can really tell that couple finally found their other half. It somehow means more to them. Anyways, on to their wedding photos...
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Comments
Oh, and #6 is gorgeous. Kinda surprised by the shadow in front of them (in the grass). Kinda looks like your flash / light was stronger than that ... not a critique, just an observation
Hey, btw. Will you post a photo of your set up sometime? I'd loooooove to see
Thanks for sharing!
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Matt maybe the lensbaby is just and expression of my distorted tunnely path Thankfully I have enough restraint not to use it all the time, but I do like it for portraits.
Angie #2 is hard light for sure, most of these are. The wedding was at 2pm and it was windy, so no softbox/umbrella. I think the combo of hard light (plus sun as back light) and f16 make it look a bit too crisp. On #6 I was blasting light at them to see them, but since it was such directional light it doesn't touch the shadow that the sun burned into the ground. What is it from my setup that you would like to see? I'm an open book
Oh I see ... makes total sense now
Just a pull back photo of the couple and the lights you use ... Just curious ... I think I'm pretty good at guessing most of the time, but it would be just nice to see .... learning from the pro
Here's the best I've got from this session (be sure to tilt your head). I always forget to take a pull back - this is really nothing more than a shot from the hip testing out my light power. For lights I'm using 4 550ex's on a Foursquare light bracket on a lightstand to camera left. Working outdoors in the middle of the day I need lots of power, but I also like to not have a car battery to carry around. When adjust properly, the result is #4.
Thanks! Ok ... would have not guessed the 4 550ex's. Is that because you wanted to have more directional light? How does that compare to an alien bee? (Sorry if that's a stupid question, I just haven't ever used 550ex's) I thought you had one alienbee with probably even a small softbox attached to it.
I've gone with the 550ex's because; with 4 of them I can get the power I need (though it probably means no modifiers in mid day), they are scalable (I can separate them into a pair, or 4 separate lights as needed), I can carry them in my camera bag, they use AA batteries which I can easily keep spares of, with the new Pocket Wizards I can use HSS. Also with the foursquare bracket, the flashes are placed a bit apart so that it sort of emulates a beauty dish - sorta. It has holes in the bracket for umbrellas and sets up as a softbox easily too. Also with four lights it keeps the recycle time down.
Thank you SO much for that insight + I totally her you about them being heavy and hard to manage. Thank you!
550ex used = $200 each
PW Flex = $220 each
Foursquare = $270
$1950 (aa batteries not included)
Alienbee 1600 = $360
Vagabond = $240
Pocket Wizard = $220
$820
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When rocking the hotshoe flashes, I'd prefer to just use one TTL flash when necessary, and the rest can just be "dummy" Ebay hotshoe flashes, like Vivitar etc. You can pick those puppies up for $50 or so...
That, and a set of cheap (but reliable) triggers is just $60 for one transmitter and three remotes...
At least, that's the route I like to go for when traveling light and simple is necessary. Which is quite often for me; I too don't really like to lug around huge power packs and strobe heads...
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
For sure Matt. Before I grew into this setup, I had three Sunpak 383's that I bought used for $30 each, a pair of pocket wizards, a custom bracket I made, and some radio shack cables to split the signal as necessary. That setup was affordable and amazing - it worked wonders. But I'm really happy with my current setup as I can now adjust flash power from my camera which saves me sooooo much time on location and lets me do more complex lighting setups if I want to.