Camera settings (flash lighting) Tripod: optional Use transmitter on hotshot White balance: daylight (5000K) ISO: 100 Exposure: Manual 1/125 shutter-speed > f/16 aperture – check settings before shooting Focal length: 105mm portrait lens Camera settings (continuous lighting) Tripod: recommended to avoid camera shake Manual exposure mode White balance: tungsten light (3200K) ISO: 400-1600 – depending on how many light sources Exposure: Manual 1/60-1/125 shutter-speed > f/4-f/8 aperture – check settings before shooting Focal length: 50mm portrait lens
I took some headshots in black and white of four of my friends using a side light and rembrandt. For this they were either sat down on a stool or stood up. I took some pictures of them looking straight at the camera and some of them looking to the side. I also took some photographs from the waist up. We used different crops like scarves and hats in order to make the pictures look more interesting. If I were to re do this photoshoot I would make sure to take more images and use more lighting set ups, as well as camera set ups.
Camera settings (flash lighting) Tripod: optional Use transmitter on hotshot White balance: daylight (5000K) ISO: 100 Exposure: Manual 1/125 shutter-speed > f/16 aperture – check settings before shooting Focal length: 105mm portrait lens Camera settings (continuous lighting) Tripod: recommended to avoid camera shake Manual exposure mode White balance: tungsten light (3200K) ISO: 400-1600 – depending on how many light sources Exposure: Manual 1/60-1/125 shutter-speed > f/4-f/8 aperture – check settings before shooting Focal length: 50mm portrait lens
For my second photoshoot, I took full face photographs and side profiles, as well as some silhouettes. I also tried a different camera setup with a black background. If I were to re do this photoshoot I would spend more time on taking photos in order to have a bigger selection.
I carried out a photoshoot using 2 point lighting, a lighting setup that includes a Key Light and a Fill Light. The Key light is for the basic lighting, whilst the fill light is used to fill in shadows out of reach of the Key light. These two lights are placed opposite each other so the subject is lit from both sides.
My Lighting setup- if I were to do this shoot again I would lessen the intensity of my fill light by moving it back or turning down the brightness.
Because I did not have someone else in the studio with me, I set up my camera so my phone could be used to as a remote to take the shots.
My Contact sheet as I begin deciding what I would like to edit
My Final Images- I edited them slightly, adjusting the colour balance to make them warmer or cooler depending on the mood I felt fit best.
Camera settings (flash lighting) Tripod: optional Use transmitter on hotshot White balance: daylight (5000K) ISO: 100 Exposure: Manual 1/125 shutter-speed > f/16 aperture – check settings before shooting Focal length: 105mm portrait lens Camera settings (continuous lighting) Tripod: recommended to avoid camera shake Manual exposure mode White balance: tungsten light (3200K) ISO: 400-1600 – depending on how many light sources Exposure: Manual 1/60-1/125 shutter-speed > f/4-f/8 aperture – check settings before shooting Focal length: 50mm portrait lens
During my first photoshoot, I focused more on the whole face and used a side light. My model sat on a chair and I took pictures of them while they looked straight at he camera and sometimes to the side. I tried keeping it simple and in the style of Oliver Doran by using only one lighting set up. If I were to re do this photoshoot I would make sure to take more images so that I can have a bigger range of options. I would also try different set ups and more poses.
Oliver Doran had come to show us and teach us how to get the best lighting and angles for taking a portrait, he also showed us how to make the subjects feel comfortable by interacting with them before he took their portrait. Oliver demonstrated how to use 1,2 and 3 point lighting to create portraits that made the model look best, along with putting the images in black and white. Furthermore, he showed us how to angle models to suit their facial features and how light can create shapes on the face such as the butterfly effect, which is when shadows are created under the nose.
Rineke Dijkstra
Rineke Dijkstra is a contemporary Dutch photographer. Known for her single portraits, usually working in series, she often focuses on particular groups and communities of people, such as mothers, adolescent and teenage boys and girls, soldiers, etc., with an emphasis on capturing the vulnerable side of her subjects.
Dijkstra is particularly concerned with the representation of youth and the transition to adulthood. Her portraits bear witness to the social pressures made visible on the bodies and faces of her subjects. Dijkstra often works in series, building upon the accumulation of detail and careful attention to minute differences in pictures taken months or years apart
Dijkstra’s seminal series, Beach Portraits (1992–1994), is composed of life-sized colour photographs of young teenagers in bathing suits taken on both American and European beaches.
Dijkstra also did another series called Olivier (2000–03), which consists of seven formal portraits that follow a young man from the day he joins the French Foreign Legion to the day he graduates. Dijkstra had initially conceived the series to focus on a group of new recruits, but as they began to drop out of the project she decided to focus on Silva alone, who ‘stood out because he was so young and because the changes in him were so visible’
21st July, 2000
21st July, 2000
1st November, 2000
30th Novermber, 2000
18th June, 2001
2nd June, 2002
13th July, 2003
“With young people, everything is much more on the surface—all the emotions,” the artist observed. “When you get older you know how to hide things.”
Rineke Dijkstra has also been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions, including “Rinkeke Dijkstra: A Retrospective,” which was shown at both the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in 2012. She currently lives and works in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Today, her works are held in the collections of the Tate Gallery in London, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Goetz Collection in Munich, and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, among others.
In Rineke Dijkstra Oliver series which consisted of her following a young boy from the start of his journey in the French Foreign Legion to the day he graduates. In these 7 photos you can see how much he has changed and grown into his surroundings from 2000-2003. I like how she pictures him in his different uniforms showing the different parts of the job he would be having to do. In the 3rd photo it looks like he has either dirt or paint on his facing which could mean he has just come back from training giving the impression that they are not scheduled photos that he gets cleaned and dressed up for.
My Portraits
I have attempted to portraits after Oliver Doran had showed us how to used the correct lighting and angles so that we could get different shadows or no shadows at all. In the photos above I like how they have shadowing on the face but none on the background. I think it helps the viewer to focus more of the person and less on what’s around them. Also in all the images there are darker elements which contrast with the lighter background making the photos ‘pop’.
Tom Kenedy is the Hamptonnes photographer he takes many photos of many different events that happen at the Hamptonne.
I like this image because of the warm light that lights up every where. in the c enter of the image the bright green plant is very good contrast to the other warm tones in the image.
taken by Tom Kenedy
This image has a lot of bright contrasting colours and warm tones which i like. there is only one subject that is actually looking into then lens which gives a sense takes away a sense of privacy because whilst the others are seen to be talking in amongst them selves this one man in the centre of the frame wearing bright colours is looking at YOU. I like that this is a long full frame shot that includes every aspect of every subject
Oliver Doran is a British/French professional photographer who mostly does celebrity portraits around the world. He often shoots in black and white and uses a variety of lighting techniques in his portraits.
Some of Doran’s work
Studio Lighting-
Rembrandt lighting is a technique used in photography often used to make the subject appear more visually interesting. It is done by placing the light at an angle so that it lights up half of the face as well as creating a small upside down triangle on their cheek, just underneath the eye.
It is a result of the Dutch painter Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, who painted many portraits using this style of lighting.
Butterfly lighting is a photography technique which can also make portraits appear more interesting. It is done by placing a light facing slightly down on the subject directly in front of them. This causes a shadow underneath their nose, which can resemble a butterfly. It is most often used by fashion and beauty photographers.
Side light / Chiaroscuro is a lighting technique where light only falls on one side of the subject. This is done by placing the light roughly 90 degrees from the camera so that only half of the subject’s face is lit up and the other is covered in shadow. It is often done to make unique and striking portraits.
Editing-
I went through all of my images and flagged which ones I wanted to use. I then rated them and chose to edit the best of those.
Final Images-
Colour Images
Black and White images
I like the majority of my images but if I were do to these shoots again I would take a lot more pictures so I have more options. I prefer the black and white images as I think they are more interesting to look at and have more contrast.
Louis Daguerre was a French artist and photographer responsible for creating the Daguerreotype photographic process, which is now seen as incredibly slow and delicate. Daguerreotypes where often used for portraits and produce incredibly detailed images on small silvered copper plates.
Examples of daguerreotypes
Henry William Fox-Talbot was an English scientist and inventor who also contributed to the development of photography. He is responsible for developing calotypes, a photographic process which can create negatives that can be printed. Details where not as clear as daguerreotypes but the ability to mass produce images was far more important at the time.
An Example of a Calotype
Julia Margaret Cameron was a British photographer who would mostly take portraits. Her work was inspired by mythology and literature leading to her using photography as more of a tool to express her art.
Julia Margaret Cameron’s work.
Henry Mullins was a British photographer who came to Jersey in 1848, to take portraits of the residents. He spent 26 years on the island, mostly taking pictures of officers of the Royal Militia and those higher up in society. After his death, 20,000 of his negatives were acquired and eventually given to The Société Jersiaise, an organisation in Jersey responsible for protecting and researching many historical subjects from the island’s past.