Photography Lessons

Kelly a Canon 7D and 2 Strobe DSLR Photography Lesson

Kelly checks the angles for his 2 off camera strobes during our 4th lesson - UT Campus

Very quickly Kelley has taken his 4th DSLR Photography Lesson with me (1st, 2nd, 3rd).  Also, the streak of lessons on the University of Tampa campus continued today (follow me on Gowalla to confirm this).  Though not without a few hiccups still, it is getting easier to setup Kelley with his two Nissin strobes and Canon 7D out on location, and get the 7D to trigger the two strobes remotely without using a dedicated trigger and receiver.  

We also put into practice our "street model" practice to best effect today.  In all we were able to get nine people to let us make their portrait today!  I will be putting up a dedicated post on the street model methodology soon.

We continued to practice using manual settings to achieve the strobist results we wanted.  However, we also witnessed how Aperture priority mode, with the exact same shutter speed, can produce a different exposure!  There are still ghosts in machines in 2010.  

A lot more attention was paid today to the setup and position of Kelley's two strobes in order to achieve the least amount of shadows on the person's face, as well as controlling the ambient light using shutter speed to show as much or little of the background that we wanted to.  This skill proved necessary when photographing a person being backlit by two open windows.  Increasing the shutter speed all the way to the max flash sync speed of 1/250th (max for a Canon 7D) allowed us to make a well exposed portrait subject and not blow out the windows behind the subject.  

Kelley will be doing some traveling abroad in the next few weeks.  His 7D will of course be traveling with him and I hope he practices the street model style in Amsterdam!  I look forward to seeing his travel photographs!  Have a good trip Kelley, see you when you get back.

Angie's first DSLR Photography Lesson - UT Campus

 

We found this shady portrait spot during our DSLR Photography Lesson at the University of Tampa

Angie drove all the way from Hudson (!) to the University of Tampa campus for our first DSLR Photography Lesson together.  Thank you!  Angie has a Nikon D40 with the two kit lenses.  She is interested in photography people, especially making portraits of babies, and she is learning on a bit of a deadline as her own newborn baby will be arriving soon!  

So we started right away getting into how aperture controls the amount of light let into the camera and the DoF (depth of focus).  One of the main reasons to get a DSLR is to be able to control the DoF and produce portraits with a pleasing bokeh.  Since there were no babies around to practice on, we just made due with a knob on a top of a pole, which we actually pretended was a diamond!

We made our way down to the river and practiced making portraits using flash.  We tried the same shot with and without flash just to see the radical difference it makes in portrait work.  Even just using the camera's pop-up flash helps a lot, although I recommended to Angie, and to anyone, that getting an external flash like the Nikon SB-600 Speedlight is eventually necessary to get the best portrait results.   

Melanie's DSLR Photography Lesson at University of Tampa

Our 3rd DSLR Photography Lesson began on the roof of a parking garage at University of TampaThis was my first DSLR Photography Lesson on the University of Tampa campus, a location I have used for portrait work in the past.  During Melanie's 3rd lesson (2nd, 1st) we mostly built on what we had done the previous two lessons.  The UT campus was a refreshing change of scenery from the usual downtown St. Petersburg locals and since we had to park at the top of a 5-story parking garage, we were able to start the lesson with a few cityscape shots of downtown Tampa.

We focused more on composition and making a photograph this third lesson.  I was constantly having Melanie try for non-eye level shots of the UT campus, which often required taking the shot on one knee or even in a fully seated, bent over position.  However, doing this allows for images that you cannot see from just standing in the same spot, which to me is one of the steps toward making a photograph.

Melanie has greatly improved her camera holding technique and her ability to navigate her Nikon D90's menus.  Now with the composition skills we practiced in our third lesson, I look forward to seeing what shots she can make on her own. 

First DSLR Photography Lesson with Michael and his Nikon D3000

Michael locks in on downtown St Petersburg during our first DSLR Photography Lesson

Michael is heading to Boston on Thursday, so I was glad my schedule allowed us to have our first DSLR Photography Lesson together before his trip.  Boston is quite a photographic town, though I have not visited it in a decade.  Michael bought a refurbished Nikon D3000 with both kit lenses online, a very good way to save some money.  I, myself, bought my Nikon D300 used in a trusted camera shop in Tokyo.  I would be a little bit careful buying a used camera body.  However, I am much less worried about buying used lenses, and in fact the two most expensive out of my four lenses were bought used.  

The Pier provides the backdrop for the last stop during our 2-hour DSLR Photography Lesson

Michael had been getting familiar with the menus, buttons and dials on his D3000, so he was quickly able to change to the settings I recommended for photographing landscapes (f/11, ISO 100), or for making a photograph with lots of bokeh (blurred background).  We even had a chance to try and capture pelicans flying right past our heads, which proved no small challenge!

I am sure Michael will be able to put to use the skills we practiced today in Boston and return with some great shots of Bean Town.  He showed himself to have a good memory for camera settings and an eagerness to master his D3000.  I look forward to seeing his shots and to our next lesson when he returns.

DSLR Photography Lesson #2 with Melanie and very senior softball!

Melanie and her Nikon D90 showing good shooting form, left palm under the lens, elbow locked in.

It was yet another blustery, chilly Saint Petersburg morning for the DSLR Photography Lesson I had with Melanie today, her second lesson.  At least it was sunny.  For this lesson, we focused almost entirely on shooting sports, to be specific, the 3/4th Century Softball club.  I will be profiling them in detail in a post next week.  

You have to of had your 74th birthday to play softball with these guys!

We were able to get right on the field for the softball game, along the third baseline.   I taught Melanie how to best hold her Nikon D90 in portrait orientation mode.  In general we focused a lot on making sure she was holding her camera in optimal position for producing  a sharp shot throughout the lesson.  

The other major focus of the lesson was, well, focus.  How to get a focus lock on a moving subject at various distances from the lens.  For this we used both single and multi-point focus, showing the strengths and weaknesses of each for photographing a team sport like softball.

It was a challenging type of photography for just our second lesson, but Melanie was able to produce some nice action shots of players rounding third especially.  For our next lesson, we will switch to architecture and landscapes, subjects a bit easier to get a focus lock on!

2 Strobe DSLR Photography Lesson with Kelley

Two strobes better than one? Kelley practiced using both his stobes during our latest DSLR photography lesson

DSLR Photography Lessons with Kelley continue to up the ante.  Today we exclusively shot with his two strobes, one off camera and the other on his Canon 7D's hotshoe.  The USF St. Petersburg Campus was our location for today, hoping to see a lot of students walking by who would not mind stopping to be our model for a shot or two.  Unfortunately we arrived just as classes started and the campus was fairly sparse.  We did get a couple of people to step in front of the strobes, including a skateboarder.  

First we practiced with me as the model as I helped Kelley dial in the best settings for shooting in Florida's harsh direct sunlight.  These are of course not ideal conditions, but we wanted to start with a challenge.  The settings we used were:

  • manual exposure (mode)
  • f/14
  • ISO 100/200
  • 1/250th
  • strobes 1/2 power

Those settings can vary by the power of your strobes, what type of diffusion (cap diffuser, softbox, umbrella) and position of the sun relevant to the model.  However, they can be used as a starting point and adjusted from there.

We next tried to make a photograph of a model (um, me) in shade near a wall without casting a shadow.  This was perhaps the biggest challenge of the day.  With a little experimenting we were able to get some satisfactory results, all things considered.

The strobist fun will continue next week when we have our 4th lesson on the University of Tampa campus.  Thanks Kelley for bringing all your photo gear out to St. Petersburg!

Andrea takes DSLR Lesson #4 - all on a tripod

The first DSLR photography lesson all on a tripod. Andrea photographs an unusual waterfall in downtown St Petersburg

Andrea took her first DSLR Photography Lesson with me just last month, but today was already our fourth lesson (1st, 2nd, 3rd), thank you Andrea!  Today we kept her Nikon D3000 on a tripod the entire time.  We intended to photograph landscapes, but upcoming preparations for a grand prix race put a bit of a barrier on that.  Still, we covered many photography composition styles, like repetition, leading lines and S-curves.  

Tripods slow down your photography, in a good way.  This lesson we took our time and really focused on getting the composition just right before pushing the shutter.  

We ended the lesson making black & white shots.  It was sunset time, but we had no cooperation from mother nature with completely overcast skies, so with no color to capture I made the suggestion that we should shoot with the intention of making black & white images.  I usually decide to make an image black & white when the colors in it do not pop, or I want to focus on the contrast between light and dark directly.  

I look forward to seeing Andrea's shots of a banyan tree and a seemingly ordinary sidewalk especially.  

Andrea told me she ordered the Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D lens, so our next lesson will focus entirely on using that lens.  I am sure she will capture some great shallow DoF shots.