Friday, September 6, 2013

1 Day + 4 Models + 1 Camera + 1 Lens + 1 Aperture

We had four models in our daylight studio yesterday. The day was bright and sunny, which meant I could use a low ISO and high shutter speed -- nice conditions to work under. I decided to break in a new Nikon D600 we had recently acquired because I wanted to see if it would be affected by the same dust spotting problems as the camera sensor I mentioned in my previous blog post. I usually take over 3000 exposures in on day on a shoot like this, and 3000 is the magic number for breaking in a D600 sensor.

Normally I use the Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 zoom for a shoot like this because it allows the quick flexibility of changing focal lengths along with a fairly wide open aperture. It is also a VR lens which helps diminish motion blur due to my hand-held shooting.  This time, however, I chose the Nikon 85mm f/1.4, one of Nikon's best lenses. I set the aperture for f/2 because I wanted to work with a very shallow depth of field that would allow me to focus on just one or two people and use the others as background. I wanted to create a spontaneous, candid look in the scenes, and find that out-of-focus foreground areas help to achieve that effect.  I never changed my camera set up all day.

I love working with the 85mm f/1.4 but it is not a VR lens, and with me moving about rapidly and encouraging the models to also move around quickly to change their expressions and body language, I like to have a high shutter speed to prevent motion blur. The sunny day allowed me to work at a speed of 1/1000 -- perfect for stopping any action in situations such as these.

4 models in 1 day with 1 camera, 1 lens, and 1 very open aperture.  A few samples from the day shoot are below.











 




2 comments:

  1. "I love working with the 85mm f/1.5..."

    Check the misstype, f/1.4 obvioulsly.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks, Toshik. I never was a very good typist.

    ReplyDelete