Thank you queen. I would like to get a foot in in the fashion magazine world here in Sweden. Not sure where to start. I have been shooting for a while and i am pretty good at retouching (d&b) and colour grading.
Hello, I'm an overseas subscriber. I'm enjoying the video. I want to refer to the video when I take a picture. Could you please include English subtitles, actual filming, or reference videos together? Sometimes. It's hard to understand without subtitles.
Hi there! Yes I'm definitely considering doing this. :) There are some AI generated captions you can turn on for the video as well, but sometimes I understand they're not 100% perfect. Thank you for the suggestion! 😊
At 6:20 you mentioned that for an editorial shoot you need to have about six looks. Does that mean six different outfits, six different lighting set ups, or six different locations?
Hi Nils! I mean six different outfits, but you can also tweak the lighting/location/backdrop for each look as well. (Just as long as there is a different outfit with potentially a change in hair and makeup too.) 🙂
I am in the aesthetic business where we take close ups of faces - just the face. I bought the lens macro 100 mm and its really capturing every wrinkle, scar and blemishes. I bought also a Lumecube brand ring light. For crisp detailed skin texture of the face, what settings should I use. For example 100% brightness and 5,000k? Please help me. Another question, how does the latest Iphone or samsung note phone compare with close up photos from high quality cameras like Canon or NIkon>
Hi Cynthia, I've never actually heard of the Lumecube ring light, so I'm really not sure what settings would be best to use for that particular light, sorry I can't help! I tend to use strobe lighting most of the time, however I also use continuous light on occasion. 🙂 Though mobile phones have absolutely come a long way in terms of their quality and detail, for close-up portraiture nothing will really beat professional cameras from Canon, Nikon, Sony, etc. The sensor size in mobile phones is just simply not large enough to capture the detail required for this sort of work.
Thank you queen. I would like to get a foot in in the fashion magazine world here in Sweden. Not sure where to start. I have been shooting for a while and i am pretty good at retouching (d&b) and colour grading.
Hello, I'm an overseas subscriber. I'm enjoying the video. I want to refer to the video when I take a picture. Could you please include English subtitles, actual filming, or reference videos together? Sometimes. It's hard to understand without subtitles.
Hi there! Yes I'm definitely considering doing this. :)
There are some AI generated captions you can turn on for the video as well, but sometimes I understand they're not 100% perfect.
Thank you for the suggestion! 😊
At 6:20 you mentioned that for an editorial shoot you need to have about six looks. Does that mean six different outfits, six different lighting set ups, or six different locations?
Hi Nils! I mean six different outfits, but you can also tweak the lighting/location/backdrop for each look as well.
(Just as long as there is a different outfit with potentially a change in hair and makeup too.) 🙂
I am in the aesthetic business where we take close ups of faces - just the face. I bought the lens macro 100 mm and its really capturing every wrinkle, scar and blemishes. I bought also a Lumecube brand ring light. For crisp detailed skin texture of the face, what settings should I use. For example 100% brightness and 5,000k? Please help me.
Another question, how does the latest Iphone or samsung note phone compare with close up photos from high quality cameras like Canon or NIkon>
Hi Cynthia, I've never actually heard of the Lumecube ring light, so I'm really not sure what settings would be best to use for that particular light, sorry I can't help!
I tend to use strobe lighting most of the time, however I also use continuous light on occasion. 🙂
Though mobile phones have absolutely come a long way in terms of their quality and detail, for close-up portraiture nothing will really beat professional cameras from Canon, Nikon, Sony, etc.
The sensor size in mobile phones is just simply not large enough to capture the detail required for this sort of work.