You've got a new subscriber! I shot some night landscape and long exposure time to the and also some portraits. Your method with the tripod for portraits at night are juat awesome. You've got to put some tutorials and share some of your setting. I love your video and thank you!
Well first off Thank You! This video was my inspiration to a wedding I did Sept 14th which I ended up getting some good night shots that I wouldn't have thought to have gotten without coming across your video here. Your shots are beautiful love the composition in everyone. Your subjects were fab as well! :P
you just got a subscriber..! :) great job… hope you share the settings you used on some of your amazing shots and how you post processed them …. cheers!
Thanks Andy, appreciate your comments! Behind the bride's vail I used an LED video light mounted on a small pocket tripod. The torch in my hand was just a little torch to help me to autofocus in the dark. All shots were taken on the Canon 24-70L lens. cheers, Joe
Stunning pictures. I wonder how brilliant you are to manage any noise in such a low light situation. As far as I know, there is not any good material teaching how to shoot in such a low light situation and come up very very beautiful and romantic pictures like you did. Truly, if you release any material or a book I WILL SUPPORT YOU. Cheers!
thanks Thipphasay Saysana that means a lot! I shoot on the Canon 5Dmkii, which lets you shoot with quite a high iso without noise. Also if you shoot wide open, ie 2.4, you can let in quite a bit of light. If your background is illuminated as it was here, you don't actually need too much light as they're pretty bright. Thanks again for your lovely comment :)
Wow, this is absolutely fantastic. I was browsing and looking for some wedding photoshoot ideas until I saw this amazing video. I am an aspiring photographer and haven't had any experience on wedding photography and recently I was asked by a friend of mine to do a photoshoot on their upcoming wedding in September herein Calgary, this is really what I wanted to do. Thanks for sharing this and please post more videos like this or great even if you can share tutorials.
Amazing photographer and I thank you for your reply to others comments. I would love to come to your courses if you one day do it in Australia. Count me a fan of your art.
What lights did you use, and id you have them behind the couple as well for a kicker light? Love these, I stink at flash outside. How did you get the ambient light in so well? Could you tell me your settings on one of them?
Thank you, I was using 24-70mmL lens, shooting at F2.4 and about iso 800. I mainly used off-camera wireless flash bounced from a gold brolly. Sometimes I used a white video light for the backlighting. Tips - really check your focussing because it's easy to get it wrong at night; even if it's fine on screen zoom in close because it might be out of focus. Use a tripod obviously. Never ever use direct flash as it will kill the ambience - always take your light source off camera! Joe
Wow! I recently discovered strobist photography, and these are the exact pictures I would like to learn to make one day. They're absolutely beautiful! If you do any more shoots, please post them! You have a Dutch fan here... ;-)
Gday I love your work. I would like to know how big was the LED lights display that was put behind the bride and how much are they these days? Keep up with the great work. And another thing I want to buy myself another Canon L Lens and the choices are Canon ef 35 F/1.4 or Canon ef 16-35 F/2.8. What would you choose and why.
Hi thanks Diesel! Appreciate your comments :) the light I used was about £20 on ebay - just search CN-126 LED Video Light. It all depends on what you want the lens for really. If it's specifically low light work I'd go for the fixed 1.4 every time - what you lose in flexibility you more than make up for with the extra fstops. I personally use the 24-70L on a full frame, and the 50mm 1.8 when it's really dark
Fantastic work Joe, what time where these taken? I mean Tower Bridge and no people or cars? what did you do?lol. Can I ask about shutter speeds to get the amazing ambiant light and no movement? Im doing a shoot soon, cant wait.
Colin Leonard Thanks Colin, appreciate that! These were done at 4am on a Sunday - even London is a little sleepy then :P but there were some cars so we had to rush the tower bridge shots a bit. You can go down to about 1/15 hand held without it being too blurry, and if you're using flash for your subjects it will freeze any movement anyway
Thanks Logan Schellenberg - Never used the 700d, but I don't see why not. So long as your lens has a decent aperture and you're body can do about 800iso without a noise problem you'll be fine.
Fantastic work Joe Gilbert. I have been assigned to shoot a wedding aboard a USS Navy Carrier. The ceremony starts at sunset. Your method of shooting is what I need to pull this off. I shoot with a 7D and a JTL Mobilight 300. Do you think this is possible with what I have ?
Hi Joe,. First of all Stunning pictures. At 3:43 did you shoot it with manual mode on camera, what settings did you use to balance the background ambient light with the sky, that looks beautiful. Using the the off camera flash is a challenge. Were you using a softbox or any modifier ?
Joe thats some fine work, I,m surprised you haven't got 17000 likes. Did you use any modifiers on your flashes. Great work this inspired me loads. A very positive LIKE from me
You seem to be able to keep a fairly reasonable shutter speed in these photos? How are you achieving this... Stuff Ive done previously Ive really had to drop the shutter speed down to bring out the background enough (mind you the background was very dark). Just curious as to what kind of shutter speeds your using and how you get the background to look so gorgeous? :) Also what WB do you use for night time while also using the flash? Thanks for the video, they are absolutely gorgeous photos!
Hi Jacob - thank you so much for your kind words - that means a lot! If your background is illuminated you don't need a very slow shutter speed - 1/60 will do the job fine. If the background isn't lit up, such as in this shoot with the Houses of parliament, I used 1/2 shutter speed on a tripod. Using a tripod keeps the background super sharp, and so long as the couple hold still you'll be fine. Using off camera flash helps too, as if the couple do move they've only been illuminated for a fraction of a second so they won't blur. It feels a little cumbersome using a tripod for wedding shoots, but trust me it's worth it! Joe
Thank you for the response I appreciate it. Most of the stuff I've done recently has zero illumination so I've had to go for really long exposures. Thank you again :)
Joe Gilbert Really enjoyed it as i am doing some weddings in london too and one will be there as well... flash wise, was it manual? what power, because you managed to get a very good ambient light there and the flash quite balanced when is actually dark... really good work :)
Bruno Conceição Thanks Bruno appreciate that. I do set the flash on manual, here's how: 1) Compose your photo and stand where you plan on taking the picture 2) Turn off your flash and take the photo - adjust exposure until the background looks perfect. 3) Turn on your flash, set the power (I normally start on like 1/4) and holding the flash next to you, take the picture until the balance is about right, adjusting flash power as necessary 4) Give your flash to your assistant (i.e. best man, dad etc) and instruct them to hold the light as desired. If your camera is on a tripod, which I would use for this kind of portraiture, you can walk with the assistant to guide them to the exact position you want 5) if the light is either too powerful or not powerful enough, the quickest and easiest way of fixing this is to tell your assistant to take a couple of steps forward or backward. As I was using a brolly for some of these shots, it's a bit different as moving the light changes the way it illuminates the couple. In this case stand next to the light, adjust power accordingly, then move yourself to where you want to be.
Appreciated for your input, for writing all that, I understanding the concept, just need to see it hands on, need to practice, haha.. I saw your video somewhere, on your work, other page and I saw you explained the context, being during the night and being sunrise and what day...magnificent initiative and for them to do that... All the best
Beautiful photography love your composition. Can i ask What settings you used to make the ambient light properly exposed ? and how you used the flash on your subjects ? thanks alot
Man.....you are good!!!!! your photos are little peralers and the video on how ya do it, sweeet!!!! What type of light was used behine the brides viel and what type of torch was in your hand when you were photographing the bride and groom and what type of lens did you use. Cheers and awesome work. Andy
Excellent shots. Need to ask you some tips..What lens you use for night shooting? Any support of wireless flash or continuous lights? What is the ISO and Aperture? Any specific time or tips for night shooters.. Thanks
Hey Diesel no problem. No I just use one flash off camera on manual power. I position the flash where I want it, then stand next to the flash and test shoot, checking the exposure on camera and changing the flash power until I'm happy with it. I then reposition myself so I'm at the angle I want to be, normally 45* from the flash, and I know that the exposure will be spot on. Saves me running back and forward to the flash!
Thank you! Really appreciated :) I shot in RAW and manually adjusted the white balance in Lightroom afterwards - I think I also spot white balanced to get the right colours on both the bride and groom and the sky.
Hi joe, Did you use any editing software after? Or that's directly out of camera? Also the flash the one comes with the camera, is it enough to get like this pix? I have canon t2i would it do job? Thank you
Hi M ShaLBY - these were all edited in Lightroom after, using the shadows and highlights to increase the tonal range of the image, i.e. illuminate more of the background without over exposing the couple. You couldn't do pictures like this with the inbuilt camera flash, it would look horrendous lol
Joe, from what I see it was quite dark, how did you manage to get the right focus, especially with the lens wide open. GREAT video and shots by the way, scares the hell out of my upcoming wedding.
Jimmy Tjon Thanks Jimmy! Yep the focussing was tough and a few of the shots I had to ditch because they wern't focused right. Generally I'll zoom all the way in, manual focus (auto is a nightmare in low light on the 5Dmk2!) then zoom out again (and don't move!)
Yes you can, use one of about 50 Cm high for more directional light. If you put the softbox or umbrella way outside of your depth of field zone, you will blur the speculars.
Yes you can use a softbox, but in my opinion the light isn't as flattering. For one, I find the brolly really scatters the light everywhere, giving a much more natural look to the images than a softbox (softbox can look great for studio photography, but isn't so natural outdoors). Also the gold brolly gives a very warm light - I don't believe you can get a gold softbox, and the white is a little colder, even with the correct white balance.
Hi Joe. I really love this video. I really hate that I don't get a good look at the flash in most of the set ups. :) Could you please answer a couple questions? I apologize if they were answered below. I scanned a few pages but didn't see. The light on the models looks so soft. Did you use any modifiers on the flash? Or, alternatively, was it just the dusk light evening out the flash shadows? I guess I also want to know if you only used one flash for these. Pretty please? Great work. I aspire to this. Thanks.
+Tanya Canam thank you! Some of the shots were taken using a Gold brolly to soften the light, the ones down by Tower Bridge and St Pauls. I think the ones on embankment were just using the ambient light from the streetlamps with an LED light behind them to backlight the veil. The ones in front of the London Eye I bounced the flash off a wall. I only used one flash throughout the shoot :) thank you again for your lovely comments
I shot on about 1/15 - as I was using a tripod the background didn't blur, and the flash froze any slight movements by the couple. That speed is long enough to capture the ambient light. Any faster would have been too dark, or required additional ISO, resulting in extra noise.
Joe Gilbert Hi Joe, one quick question ( it might sound stupid ... but ) how do you book your weddings or sessions? do you use Google Calendar, any online calendar, regular phone calendar, paper + pen agenda? or all the above? Like I use photobiz.com calendar however I am planning to change the method ,but just to want to make sure what is the most secure way to keep contracts books organized and safe not to accidentally delete a booked wedding. Thanks and warm regards.
It's personal preference to be honest - I find the silver light quite cold and unnatural. I used the gold here as my subjects were quite pale, and the gold light just warms up the skin tones a little. However last week I was working with a couple with dark complexions, so I used a white brolly to keep the natural warm tones of their skin accurate. The white doesn't affect the colour tones, and if you WB for flash if will be pretty much spot on.
Gosh these are amazing shot Joe!!! I really don't know how you can pull night shot this ambient. Great job!!!
Amazing night portrait wedding. I love it. Thanks for sharing.
Your work is amazing. Thanks for being so generous with your skills and know how. Inspirational work
Joe, great to see another London wedding photographer taking on a night shoot in central London. Not easy but nicely done and great pictures.
Can't stop watching this. You photos are so beautiful, as are the couple
Amazing images, what an awesome wedding photo shoot by a very talented photographer! Great job.
I sooo love this one Joe...thanks for sharing... :-)
That was some pretty good stuff, great work!
Very gorgeous photos! I love your technique..Thanks for sharing!
Fab and great to see you working in that light yet creating those images x
You've got a new subscriber! I shot some night landscape and long exposure time to the and also some portraits. Your method with the tripod for portraits at night are juat awesome. You've got to put some tutorials and share some of your setting. I love your video and thank you!
Amazing Work, Love it
Realy Amazing...I love it !
It was so awesome. Share us more great videos. And please add exif in every picture. So we can learn from it.
Well first off Thank You! This video was my inspiration to a wedding I did Sept 14th which I ended up getting some good night shots that I wouldn't have thought to have gotten without coming across your video here. Your shots are beautiful love the composition in everyone. Your subjects were fab as well! :P
you just got a subscriber..! :) great job… hope you share the settings you used on some of your amazing shots and how you post processed them …. cheers!
Great images!!!!! Thank you for posting and telling us how you did it. It was very inspirational
Thank you for your lovely comment :-) have a nice day! Joe
Thanks Andy, appreciate your comments! Behind the bride's vail I used an LED video light mounted on a small pocket tripod. The torch in my hand was just a little torch to help me to autofocus in the dark. All shots were taken on the Canon 24-70L lens. cheers, Joe
This is amazing! So impressive!!
i got a night pre-wedding shoot after tomorrow and this has been great to learn from and to get some confidence. awesome awesome work!!!
thank to quack18 - really appreciate your feedback!
Stunning pictures. I wonder how brilliant you are to manage any noise in such a low light situation. As far as I know, there is not any good material teaching how to shoot in such a low light situation and come up very very beautiful and romantic pictures like you did. Truly, if you release any material or a book I WILL SUPPORT YOU. Cheers!
thanks Thipphasay Saysana that means a lot! I shoot on the Canon 5Dmkii, which lets you shoot with quite a high iso without noise. Also if you shoot wide open, ie 2.4, you can let in quite a bit of light. If your background is illuminated as it was here, you don't actually need too much light as they're pretty bright. Thanks again for your lovely comment :)
Thanks for such a kind comment. Cheers! Joe Gilbert
Love Love Love!
Loved it!
Thanks, yeah it was a great photo shoot to do, really enjoyed it!
apparently you have a magic camera my good man...cuz those images seem like somethin out of this world...Excellent stuff!
Wow, this is absolutely fantastic. I was browsing and looking for some wedding photoshoot ideas until I saw this amazing video. I am an aspiring photographer and haven't had any experience on wedding photography and recently I was asked by a friend of mine to do a photoshoot on their upcoming wedding in September herein Calgary, this is really what I wanted to do. Thanks for sharing this and please post more videos like this or great even if you can share tutorials.
the groom just flirted with ur assistant at 0:49 , way to goo man ))) boys will be boys ))
Amazing photographer and I thank you for your reply to others comments. I would love to come to your courses if you one day do it in Australia. Count me a fan of your art.
What lights did you use, and id you have them behind the couple as well for a kicker light? Love these, I stink at flash outside. How did you get the ambient light in so well? Could you tell me your settings on one of them?
beautiful shots, i was amazed by your quality and passion seen in your pictures perfectly done, cheers from peru :)
Your work is awesome brother, you should Definitely make more videos!
CReyes811 Thank you man appreciated :)
Hey you are amazing Photographer.
Keep it up
beautiful images!! I love your work!!!
Thank you, I was using 24-70mmL lens, shooting at F2.4 and about iso 800. I mainly used off-camera wireless flash bounced from a gold brolly. Sometimes I used a white video light for the backlighting. Tips - really check your focussing because it's easy to get it wrong at night; even if it's fine on screen zoom in close because it might be out of focus. Use a tripod obviously. Never ever use direct flash as it will kill the ambience - always take your light source off camera! Joe
Wow! I recently discovered strobist photography, and these are the exact pictures I would like to learn to make one day. They're absolutely beautiful! If you do any more shoots, please post them! You have a Dutch fan here... ;-)
Beautiful!
love your work here man! pls post more videos.
thanks Ronnie!
Wonderful job, congratulations.
thank you :)
Gday I love your work. I would like to know how big was the LED lights display that was put behind the bride and how much are they these days? Keep up with the great work. And another thing I want to buy myself another Canon L Lens and the choices are Canon ef 35 F/1.4 or Canon ef 16-35 F/2.8. What would you choose and why.
Hi thanks Diesel! Appreciate your comments :) the light I used was about £20 on ebay - just search CN-126 LED Video Light. It all depends on what you want the lens for really. If it's specifically low light work I'd go for the fixed 1.4 every time - what you lose in flexibility you more than make up for with the extra fstops. I personally use the 24-70L on a full frame, and the 50mm 1.8 when it's really dark
Fantastic work Joe, what time where these taken? I mean Tower Bridge and no people or cars? what did you do?lol. Can I ask about shutter speeds to get the amazing ambiant light and no movement? Im doing a shoot soon, cant wait.
Colin Leonard Thanks Colin, appreciate that! These were done at 4am on a Sunday - even London is a little sleepy then :P but there were some cars so we had to rush the tower bridge shots a bit. You can go down to about 1/15 hand held without it being too blurry, and if you're using flash for your subjects it will freeze any movement anyway
wow good job .. tnx joe..
Excellent pictures! Would a 700d/t5i be able to coup these shots off with a good lense?
Thanks Logan Schellenberg - Never used the 700d, but I don't see why not. So long as your lens has a decent aperture and you're body can do about 800iso without a noise problem you'll be fine.
can you tell me what about ur iso range ? to get that light in backgrounds thanks in advance
Wow !! Beautiful pictures :)..more videos :)
Thanks Michal :)
Fantastic work Joe Gilbert. I have been assigned to shoot a wedding aboard a USS Navy Carrier. The ceremony starts at sunset. Your method of shooting is what I need to pull this off. I shoot with a 7D and a JTL Mobilight 300. Do you think this is possible with what I have ?
+Joe Sauceda no
Hi Joe,. First of all Stunning pictures. At 3:43 did you shoot it with manual mode on camera, what settings did you use to balance the background ambient light with the sky, that looks beautiful. Using the the off camera flash is a challenge. Were you using a softbox or any modifier ?
Joe thats some fine work, I,m surprised you haven't got 17000 likes. Did you use any modifiers on your flashes. Great work this inspired me loads.
A very positive LIKE from me
thanks Lee Ellerker appreciate that! No flash modifiers, just a gold brolly
Hi Brian, thanks for your lovely comment, really appreciate that! Thank you :) keep at it and you'll master off camera flash before you know it ;)
Joe
It's amazing, really wow!!! Can i ask you what did you use to light the couple at 3:21 ?
Awesome photography. What equipment did you use?
your works amazing!!! ive just subscribed, cant wait to practice...
Nice nice nice @ Joe Gilbert :)
You seem to be able to keep a fairly reasonable shutter speed in these photos? How are you achieving this... Stuff Ive done previously Ive really had to drop the shutter speed down to bring out the background enough (mind you the background was very dark). Just curious as to what kind of shutter speeds your using and how you get the background to look so gorgeous? :) Also what WB do you use for night time while also using the flash? Thanks for the video, they are absolutely gorgeous photos!
Hi Jacob - thank you so much for your kind words - that means a lot! If your background is illuminated you don't need a very slow shutter speed - 1/60 will do the job fine. If the background isn't lit up, such as in this shoot with the Houses of parliament, I used 1/2 shutter speed on a tripod. Using a tripod keeps the background super sharp, and so long as the couple hold still you'll be fine. Using off camera flash helps too, as if the couple do move they've only been illuminated for a fraction of a second so they won't blur. It feels a little cumbersome using a tripod for wedding shoots, but trust me it's worth it!
Joe
Thank you for the response I appreciate it. Most of the stuff I've done recently has zero illumination so I've had to go for really long exposures. Thank you again :)
Joe Gilbert Really enjoyed it as i am doing some weddings in london too and one will be there as well... flash wise, was it manual? what power, because you managed to get a very good ambient light there and the flash quite balanced when is actually dark... really good work :)
Bruno Conceição Thanks Bruno appreciate that. I do set the flash on manual, here's how:
1) Compose your photo and stand where you plan on taking the picture
2) Turn off your flash and take the photo - adjust exposure until the background looks perfect.
3) Turn on your flash, set the power (I normally start on like 1/4) and holding the flash next to you, take the picture until the balance is about right, adjusting flash power as necessary
4) Give your flash to your assistant (i.e. best man, dad etc) and instruct them to hold the light as desired. If your camera is on a tripod, which I would use for this kind of portraiture, you can walk with the assistant to guide them to the exact position you want
5) if the light is either too powerful or not powerful enough, the quickest and easiest way of fixing this is to tell your assistant to take a couple of steps forward or backward.
As I was using a brolly for some of these shots, it's a bit different as moving the light changes the way it illuminates the couple. In this case stand next to the light, adjust power accordingly, then move yourself to where you want to be.
Appreciated for your input, for writing all that, I understanding the concept, just need to see it hands on, need to practice, haha.. I saw your video somewhere, on your work, other page and I saw you explained the context, being during the
night and being sunrise and what day...magnificent initiative and for them to do that...
All the best
Beautiful photography love your composition.
Can i ask What settings you used to make the ambient light properly exposed ? and how you used the flash on your subjects ? thanks alot
Man.....you are good!!!!! your photos are little peralers and the video on how ya do it, sweeet!!!! What type of light was used behine the brides viel and what type of torch was in your hand when you were photographing the bride and groom and what type of lens did you use. Cheers and awesome work. Andy
Excellent shots. Need to ask you some tips..What lens you use for night shooting? Any support of wireless flash or continuous lights? What is the ISO and Aperture? Any specific time or tips for night shooters.. Thanks
What is the settings of your camera? ISO, Aperture and shutter speed? thanks!
wich settings do you use in camara an also in flash thank you very much. I apreciate your tips.
Thanks Jenny, yep the light certainly was challenging especially with the 5Ds focussing problems, but managed to work around that :-)
Hey Joe thank you for getting back to me and just one more thing. Do you use the flash on I think it is called 2nd sync flash. Thanks, Andy
Hey Diesel no problem. No I just use one flash off camera on manual power. I position the flash where I want it, then stand next to the flash and test shoot, checking the exposure on camera and changing the flash power until I'm happy with it. I then reposition myself so I'm at the angle I want to be, normally 45* from the flash, and I know that the exposure will be spot on. Saves me running back and forward to the flash!
Hi! Great great shots and compositions! Were you using TTL or manual on your flashes? Cheers!
Thanks! I use manual for my off camera flash in order to get the exact balance of light needed. cheers!
Fantastic video, Joe! Do you remember what setting your white balance was...? Did you have to adjust since you were using the gold umbrella? Thanks
Thank you! Really appreciated :) I shot in RAW and manually adjusted the white balance in Lightroom afterwards - I think I also spot white balanced to get the right colours on both the bride and groom and the sky.
brilliant!
Hi joe,
Did you use any editing software after? Or that's directly out of camera? Also the flash the one comes with the camera, is it enough to get like this pix? I have canon t2i would it do job? Thank you
Hi M ShaLBY - these were all edited in Lightroom after, using the shadows and highlights to increase the tonal range of the image, i.e. illuminate more of the background without over exposing the couple. You couldn't do pictures like this with the inbuilt camera flash, it would look horrendous lol
Thanks Giorgio! The photos by Tower Bridge were lit using a gold brolly / off camera flash, and about 1/15th exposure to capture the ambient light.
You're amazing.
fantastic shoots! what WB do you use? thank you :)
Love it
Joe, from what I see it was quite dark, how did you manage to get the right focus, especially with the lens wide open. GREAT video and shots by the way, scares the hell out of my upcoming wedding.
Jimmy Tjon Thanks Jimmy! Yep the focussing was tough and a few of the shots I had to ditch because they wern't focused right. Generally I'll zoom all the way in, manual focus (auto is a nightmare in low light on the 5Dmk2!) then zoom out again (and don't move!)
thanks Claire!
hi Joe. the London wedding shoot is awesome. can u share Ur technical details with me. can u guide me to Ur tutorial s. ashok, Bangalore
Great night shot Images...Just one question can I use soft box with low power in speed light instead of using umbrella?
Yes you can, use one of about 50 Cm high for more directional light. If you put the softbox or umbrella way outside of your depth of field zone, you will blur the speculars.
Yes you can use a softbox, but in my opinion the light isn't as flattering. For one, I find the brolly really scatters the light everywhere, giving a much more natural look to the images than a softbox (softbox can look great for studio photography, but isn't so natural outdoors). Also the gold brolly gives a very warm light - I don't believe you can get a gold softbox, and the white is a little colder, even with the correct white balance.
Thank you, really appreciate that :-)
What configuration do you use for these photos, and what kind of flash? Thaks you.
Hi Joe. I really love this video. I really hate that I don't get a good look at the flash in most of the set ups. :) Could you please answer a couple questions? I apologize if they were answered below. I scanned a few pages but didn't see. The light on the models looks so soft. Did you use any modifiers on the flash? Or, alternatively, was it just the dusk light evening out the flash shadows? I guess I also want to know if you only used one flash for these. Pretty please? Great work. I aspire to this. Thanks.
+Tanya Canam thank you! Some of the shots were taken using a Gold brolly to soften the light, the ones down by Tower Bridge and St Pauls. I think the ones on embankment were just using the ambient light from the streetlamps with an LED light behind them to backlight the veil. The ones in front of the London Eye I bounced the flash off a wall.
I only used one flash throughout the shoot :) thank you again for your lovely comments
+Joe Gilbert Thanks so much. Great information sharing. I really appreciate it.
you are the man
thanks :)
Some interesting insight here, thanks. What's with the flashlight at 2:46, what's it's purpose ?
what a shoooootttttss.. i love it ^_^
very nice dude.
Que configuraciones usa para estas fotos que tipò de flash? Gracias.
+Oswaldo Torres Londoño Que es?
What settings did you use on these photos?
"" I was using 24-70mmL lens, shooting at F2.4 and about iso 800. " what speed you got approximately with F2.4 ? 1/30 ? 1/8 ? 1/ 60?
I shot on about 1/15 - as I was using a tripod the background didn't blur, and the flash froze any slight movements by the couple. That speed is long enough to capture the ambient light. Any faster would have been too dark, or required additional ISO, resulting in extra noise.
Thank you very much!
Joe Gilbert Hi Joe, one quick question ( it might sound stupid ... but ) how do you book your weddings or sessions? do you use Google Calendar, any online calendar, regular phone calendar, paper + pen agenda? or all the above? Like I use photobiz.com calendar however I am planning to change the method ,but just to want to make sure what is the most secure way to keep contracts books organized and safe not to accidentally delete a booked wedding. Thanks and warm regards.
I see that you said bounced from a gold brolly, what if using a silver one. Will it look totally bad ?
It's personal preference to be honest - I find the silver light quite cold and unnatural. I used the gold here as my subjects were quite pale, and the gold light just warms up the skin tones a little. However last week I was working with a couple with dark complexions, so I used a white brolly to keep the natural warm tones of their skin accurate. The white doesn't affect the colour tones, and if you WB for flash if will be pretty much spot on.
Hi joe where can I get in touch with u.. I would love for you to do my shoot too
Subjects are lit using a Canon 580 speedlight bounced from a gold brolly
I was yelled at for using a tripod on that walkway....
💕💕💕🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
do you have facebook ?
Awesome shoot...!!! The couple is looking great together....!!!
Visit: aucklandweddingphotography.com for more information.