Author | Thread |
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02/12/2008 04:48:54 PM · #26 |
Originally posted by fotomann_forever: Originally posted by Gordon: Originally posted by Bear_Music: So, by definition, the images have to be shot indoors?
R. |
Hard to tell. Leroy himself used flash on the last natural light challenge |
:-D Guilty as charged. Might be a bit harder to fake that I shot indoors though. |
i think faking "ambient" light is quite easy. i also used two strobes and shot in front of a white background for the natural light portrait challenge, but can you really tell i used flash lights from the photo?
ETA:...except from that little catch lights in her eyes? ;)
Message edited by author 2008-02-12 16:51:39. |
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02/12/2008 04:55:43 PM · #27 |
Originally posted by scalvert: This is why cameras have separate WB settings for sun and shade, even though all the light is still coming from the sun in both cases. |
Yup, but direct sunlight through a window is a different WB to direct sunlight in an open, unshaded field.
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02/12/2008 07:04:10 PM · #28 |
Originally posted by scalvert: Originally posted by glad2badad: Originally posted by Gordon: Originally posted by glad2badad: Didn't realize sunlight had two considerations (thru window vs outside). |
It's also a different colour temperature too :) Now that's a thought experiment for those who disagree... |
Depends on the window I'd think, and distance from - yes? |
This is why cameras have separate WB settings for sun and shade, even though all the light is still coming from the sun in both cases. |
We have big windows. :-D |
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