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Blue_playwright

(1,568 posts)
Wed Dec 23, 2020, 11:23 AM Dec 2020

Advice?

One of my clients is a restaurant and while I have food staging experience and some decent equipment- I’m struggling with the light and glare in the restaurant for photography.

I’m no photography expert. I’M a writer doing social media. I’m barely above novice but it’s the only client I am struggling with. I can’t use a box or go shoot after hours so there’s less glare. And client wants environmental photos showing it’s taken in the dining room.

Spent forever trying to shoot this.
[link:https://www.instagram.com/p/CJG6mrpLDPQ/?igshid=1m98mhjibco4j|]

This one ok.
[link:https://www.instagram.com/p/CI3IGM2rkbU/?igshid=15h01kelop53x|]

But compared to my other clients, it’s a struggle. Without a huge investment in more equipment- ideas?

4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Advice? (Original Post) Blue_playwright Dec 2020 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Dec 2020 #1
Tried bouncing light? LunaSea Dec 2020 #2
Here's what I would do Major Nikon Dec 2020 #3
Thank you guys! Blue_playwright Dec 2020 #4

Response to Blue_playwright (Original post)

Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
3. Here's what I would do
Wed Dec 23, 2020, 11:47 AM
Dec 2020

The only equipment you will need is a tripod, a strobe you can fire off camera and a reflector.

1) Compose the image with ambient lighting only with the camera on a tripod to get the best result. Use all manual settings and record your shutter speed setting. Do not adjust aperture again from this point.

2) Set the strobe and the reflector on opposite sides of the subject as close as you can get without being in the frame. Set your camera's shutter speed to the highest flash mechanical sync speed(probably between 200 and 320). Set the strobe to manual and adjust the power as necessary. Adjust the distance of the strobe and the reflector to subject to achieve the lighting ratio that looks best.

3) Set your shutter speed to 1 stop below where it was in step 1.

4) Adjust the power of the strobe to add as much fill as you need to the ambient lighting.

This should get you in the ballpark. From there you will make small adjustments to the shutter speed and strobe power output to achieve the desired effect. In post processing with Adobe Lightroom or some other post processing software, you can make even smaller adjustments to highlighting and shadow to fine tune the results.

Blue_playwright

(1,568 posts)
4. Thank you guys!
Sun Dec 27, 2020, 09:19 AM
Dec 2020

I’ll start this week with the bouncing light and invest in the equipment next payday.

For a writer that fell into social media work, I’m lost creatively. I appreciate it!

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