Saturday, August 30, 2008

Week 1 in the bag


I shot football for the Rochelle News-Leader last night. It's been about 8 or 9 months since I last shot football and probably longer since I shot night football. (Gotta love playoff Saturday games.) Either way, I wouldn't say it was my worst outing, but it certainly wasn't my best.

The combination of trying to learn to use a monopod and my overall rustiness was a challenge. And even though Rochelle built this really nice new field, they certainly weren't thinking of photographers when they did it. (The inconsiderateness of some people.)

The night didn't start off the greatest. The team they were playing was Chicago Corliss. Apparently they are a slapped together inner city team that hasn't even started classes yet. It actually reminded me of something from one of those Disney movies where the team is terrible and then a coach comes in and whips them into ship only to lead them to the state championship. Except they're still in that really awful part of the movie where the kids can't do anything right. I'm not trying to rag on the kids, they certainly put in a good effort and even scored more points than I would assumed. It just would have been nice if the coaches dressed like actual coaches and their kids wouldn't have taken several cheap shots after the whistle was blown. I can't tell you how many times the refs had to continually remind them to stop when the whistle was blown.

Then there was the huge amount of flags thrown. The first half didn't even end until almost 10 p.m. Oh, and did I mention the other team showed up an hour late. So then we were talking zero daylight shots. Throughout the game I struggled with whether I should be using my flash or not? At times it worked nicely for a little fill and others I was just really mad, like at the photo at the right. A nice reaction shot, but the flash made it look terrible.

I have another game tonight on the southside of Chicago. I might try no flash the first half and flash the second half and tweek my settings a bit. It'd be really nice if I had some 300 glass, but that's not going to happen anytime soon.

Rochelle came out ahead 49-14 in the end, but they definitely need to tighten up. Hopefully week 1 jitters are gone by the 2nd or third week because any team with a reasonable amount of talent will certainly give them a challenge.

Anyway, I have a lot of photos to post, but it's going to take a little time to get them up. I'll go into detail about shooting on my other blog later today or tomorrow, but for now I gotta get ready to go.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

First-ever tennis shoot


Daniel Williams/Lifeworks Imaging/www.lifeworksimaging.com
RTHS varsity tennis player Jessica Albers reaches for the ball during the team's match vs. Belvidere Monday in Rochelle.



I shot tennis for the first time practically ever today. I think I may have shot it once during my time at EIU, but not that I can really remember. I tried to go featurey with it, but found myself lacking any creativity. I think it was mostly the lack of a clean background. Chain link fences and buildings, poles and everything else behind them don't really inspire much. Regardless, I tried and will continue to try more.

If interested in seeing a few shots from today, check out the link here. I'm really looking forward to soccer, but I have football Friday night and if the rain holds off I'm going to try for some skating shots with lights tomorrow.

It's been a long night and hard day, so I'm headed to bed. Good night all!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Beauty only costs $5

Update: After posting this, I came across several similar versions. Somewhat similar, but everybod'ys always have their own techniques. Mine works great for what I need, but improvise with whatever you have laying around.

After researching a lot of information about beauty dishes, I realized there was absolutley no good reason I couldn't make my own for a fraction of the price of professionally developed ones. There were a lot of good ideas I picked from through diyphotography and various other sights.

I started out with a few goals in mind. I wanted to make one small and portable enough for a Nikon SB-80DX or my other SBs. I wanted it light as possible so as not to bend the strobe down on the light stand, but I wanted it versatile enough to withstand moving from location to location. After viewing a few with the turkey roaster approach I decided they were too flimsy and not professional looking at all. I realize many photographers would not be concerned with the professional look, but I shoot senior photos and kids can be cruel. Heck, if my photographer showed up with a turkey pan I'd have made fun of him too at 18 years old. So keeping it aesthetically pleasing was a small concern. Here is what I came up with. I labeled everything step by step with as many photos as I could. Sorry for the low-quality images, but I was so anxious to actually build it, that I didn't take much time to snap the photos.

Step 1 - Gather materials and tools
Supplies:
Large plastic mixing bowl. - Dollar General - $1.50
Standard pack of soup bowls - Dollar General - $1 for 3
Three bolts and six matching nuts - Local hardware store - $.93
Matte black spray paint- $??? Not sure, had it in the garage.
Tools:
Exacto knife
Drill (optional)
Marker
Old newspaper


Step 2 - Mark the hole
First take the large mixing bowl and flip it upside down so the bowl portion is facing the table or ground. Place the flash head you're going to use in the center. I just eyeballed it close. Next take you're marker and trace the outside of the flash. (You may want to use black so it blends in with the flash if it marks the head. I accidntally used silver and learned the hard way. I guess I could've used a pencil.)

Step 3 - Spray one standard bowl
You're going to need to spray the backside of one of the standard bowls at this point. My bowls were white and were reflecting all the light, leaving a solid circle in the middle, not a donut shape in the speculars. Technically I used a black bed liner spray, but I think matte black would work just fine. I personally like the bed liner spray though. It dried incredibly fast and made it textured as to reflect less light. Sorry, no photos of this.

Step 4 - Mark the bolt holes
You need to mark the holes you're going to drill in the lip of the standard bowl and the bottom of the mixing bowl. I placed the mixing bowl upside down on the floor again. Then I put the standard bowl upside down on top of it. Sort of like two igloos on top of each other. Then I just marked arbitrary holes. I eyballed it again and placed the holes equally apart. Then I lifted the standard bowl and put marks in about the same places on the mixing bowl. Because your bolts will have a little play in them, you don't have to be exact, just close.

Step 5 - Drill holes
Now drill all the holes out. Make sure to use a drill bit slightly smaller than your bolts. You want them to squeeze in the holes to stay in place. Then do the standard bowl. Same concept.

Step 6 - Add bolts
Place the bolts through the back of the mixing bowl. It should be a nice tight squeeze. Then remove them and put them through standard bowl. Put them through so the head of the bolt is on the bottom side of the bowl. Basically if you were to set it on a table to eat out of the bolts would be sticking up in the air.

Step 7 - The nuts
Put one nut on each bolt about a half an inch up. Then put take the entire standard bowl and place it inside the mixing bowl so the bolts can suspend the standard bowl two or three inches away and reversed. (The bowls should now be facing each other and the black side facing out on the standard bowl. If the nuts were distributed evenly on the bolts, the standard bowl should be at about the same height all the way around. Now place the remaining nuts on the backside of the mixing bowl and tighten them down.

Steph 8 - Add to strobe, beautify
Now place the beauty dish on the flash head and beautify. You can see from the example You really get the donut hole shape.

I had a little trial and error with this. I originally left both bowls white, but didn't get the specular I wanted. I could've added another bolt and another series of nuts to keep the standard bowl from sliding down, but because I underdrilled the holes I didn't need to. I think it looks fairly professional works excellent. Plus it's nice and portable. If there's any questions let me know and I'll try to respond. Oh, and it helps to have velcro already attached to your flash and to cut that hole nice and tight so it squeezes onto the strobe head and stays in place. I will update with photos in a little bit.

Cheers!

Monday, August 25, 2008

The blog's back

So it's been a little while. Here's an update. Stephanie and I moved to Rochelle. I no longer work for a newspaper. In Rochelle we plan to start our photography studio. We're in the process of buying a house and she's back to work for Wills Chiropractic in Rochelle.

Other than that, not much has happened. I guess that's enough excitement for a few months. Anyway, now that I don't work for the paper I feel I can freely post whatever I want. Feels kind of nice. I'm really trying to learn a lot of new photography tips right now. It seems the more I learn the less I feel I know. Seems odd, but photography has really evolved in the past several years. Things that worked well in the past don't necessarily work any more. Digital has opened up the realm of possibilities so much too. The learning curve gets shorter each day and I feel I slip farther behind at a faster pace. Maybe one day I'll feel I'm at a comfortable medium. I'll update later tonight on more specifics, but just wanted to get a brief post about what's happened so far.