Suggestions for first time portrait shooting
I have a local low-income day care where I'm friends with some employees there. One of them commented on having school portrait type pictures done, one thing lead to another, and I volunteered to help them out at no cost from my end, with our goal being to get at least one picture to each family.
However, I'm not a professional photographer. I'm not a terrible one either, and I see this as a way to help out my community while also gaining some valuable experience. That said, I'm not 100% certain what all I should have to complete this. Could you fellow Dgrinner's suggest a "bare minimum" list of things I should acquire to do some basic school portrait type shots?
I currently have a Nikon D5100, SB400 flash, 35mm lens and a tripod. I am willing to spend a few hundred to get equipment, but don't have a huge budget as its purely pro bono, I just feel strongly that every family should have some pictures of their kids/themselves in their home and want to help out. Backdrops are going to be supplied by the day care (they are going to make an art project out of it).
Suggestions?
However, I'm not a professional photographer. I'm not a terrible one either, and I see this as a way to help out my community while also gaining some valuable experience. That said, I'm not 100% certain what all I should have to complete this. Could you fellow Dgrinner's suggest a "bare minimum" list of things I should acquire to do some basic school portrait type shots?
I currently have a Nikon D5100, SB400 flash, 35mm lens and a tripod. I am willing to spend a few hundred to get equipment, but don't have a huge budget as its purely pro bono, I just feel strongly that every family should have some pictures of their kids/themselves in their home and want to help out. Backdrops are going to be supplied by the day care (they are going to make an art project out of it).
Suggestions?
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Then I picked up 2 of these light stands and then two of these Umbrella Softboxes. These are only 40", so they may be a bit small for some peoples taste, but so far for my testing and minimal plans, they have been great.
I already have an external speedlight which I will be using to light the background or subject from the back after some testing. Ordered a cheap backdrop stand and muslin as well, but you will have that provided to you it sounds like.
Lastly, you should see if there is a Help-Portrait event near by you, or maybe even get one started. The whole idea is exactly what you're doing.
www.zblackwood.com
Stupid question, but did you have to buy a transmitter to fire those strobes as well, or are they flash fired or ?
Comments and constructive criticism always welcome.
www.mikejulianaphotography.com
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I am using some very cheap wireless triggers. These are what I currently have with a couple additional receivers.
The place that Mike said to check out is an excellent resource. Definitely spend some time there.
www.zblackwood.com
You have destroyed my productivity! I'd never heard of that site, but thank you. Its fantastic.
For the lens, I also have an 18-55mm and the 55-200mm. I had someone suggest the 55-200 set to 55 would be around 80mm after crop factor. Not sure if picking up the 50mm fixed would make a huge difference in this particular use case. Or are you suggesting an 80mm lens before accounting for crop factor?
Comments and constructive criticism always welcome.
www.mikejulianaphotography.com
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