With the kitchen shot the flash would have reduced the reflections on the cupboards and uniformed the colour of them. I know they are grey but I can't tell what shade of grey they are because of the colour cast, with flash you would easily know. The photos are great and you are doing a really great job.
@ That is awesome. When I started doing Flambant I would do my normal HDR bracketing shot in camera and then I’ll add a flash pop above the camera so if I messed up the flash shot, I still had the HDR to work with. Now I only take one ambient shot and one flash shot above the camera and sometimes if I need it, I’ll take a window pull flash shot, using darken mode in photoshop. I think it’s great learning new techniques. Hearing that you do your HDR manually was interesting, I’ve never thought of that. I’m going to give it a try, I can now see how the gives you more control of the exposures you’ll need for the edit to produce the final photo. Thank you, that gives me a new technique to learn..
I also shoot HDR. Clients care about customer service and that you're easy to work with. The only thing you might want to consider adding to your kit is a circular polarizer filter since you've got a lot of hard surfaces with glare bouncing hard off of them. The filter will help to 0 those glares out and reveal more detail.
@@BobbyCoronado85 Pretty much any that will fit your lens. You don't need to spend $100+ on a CPF. I think I got one for around $20 and it does the job just fine!
To be honest, I do not, I adjust my kelvin to the best of my ability and I just have a really good editors that take care of the rest. Hope this helps.
Still doing HDR Photos and happy to say no complains.
Same here 🙌🏼
With the kitchen shot the flash would have reduced the reflections on the cupboards and uniformed the colour of them. I know they are grey but I can't tell what shade of grey they are because of the colour cast, with flash you would easily know. The photos are great and you are doing a really great job.
I really appreciate that, I considering learning flash this year so I can sharpen my skills 🙏🏻
@ That is awesome. When I started doing Flambant I would do my normal HDR bracketing shot in camera and then I’ll add a flash pop above the camera so if I messed up the flash shot, I still had the HDR to work with.
Now I only take one ambient shot and one flash shot above the camera and sometimes if I need it, I’ll take a window pull flash shot, using darken mode in photoshop. I think it’s great learning new techniques.
Hearing that you do your HDR manually was interesting, I’ve never thought of that. I’m going to give it a try, I can now see how the gives you more control of the exposures you’ll need for the edit to produce the final photo. Thank you, that gives me a new technique to learn..
I also shoot HDR. Clients care about customer service and that you're easy to work with. The only thing you might want to consider adding to your kit is a circular polarizer filter since you've got a lot of hard surfaces with glare bouncing hard off of them. The filter will help to 0 those glares out and reveal more detail.
Any circular polarizer filter you recommend?
@@BobbyCoronado85 Pretty much any that will fit your lens. You don't need to spend $100+ on a CPF. I think I got one for around $20 and it does the job just fine!
Are you white balancing(white card) before shooting because for HDR this is fantastic because im not seeing any color casts at all
To be honest, I do not, I adjust my kelvin to the best of my ability and I just have a really good editors that take care of the rest. Hope this helps.