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How to shoot and light a colored room

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  • Опубликовано: 20 мар 2017
  • Not all houses have white ceilings or walls to bounce from, leading to various challenges. Here I show simple techniques to overcome these problems using a recently difficult room to work with. See more techniques in my real estate photography series at amzn.to/3mFoznx

Комментарии • 35

  • @tomingrassiaimages8776
    @tomingrassiaimages8776 3 года назад +1

    Your ebooks are worth it!!!

  • @bosscoman
    @bosscoman 6 лет назад +1

    Some good solutions here. Had a very difficult house the other day with coloured ceilings. Forgot about trying to bounce off something white. Got useable product somehow with a lot of post work. Your books are excellent too

  • @lucasteamhomes8844
    @lucasteamhomes8844 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you so much for your channel! I'm just getting out of HDR, and your tutorials have really opened things up for me. Cheers!

  • @TheKentg01
    @TheKentg01 7 лет назад +2

    Thank you Nathan. Great advice, great tool, great tutorial!

  • @MaryKayUlsamer
    @MaryKayUlsamer 4 года назад +1

    Super helpful!!! Loved your comment about the nice sellers :)

  • @CliffyBRD2008
    @CliffyBRD2008 7 лет назад +2

    Thanks for the great tutorials. I would be interested in a video on the gear you use.

  • @HighSierraBob
    @HighSierraBob 7 лет назад +1

    Good video, Nathan! Orange walls... mama mia!

  • @marnienorris
    @marnienorris 7 лет назад +2

    Great tutorial. Thank u! Very much appreciated!

  • @AdirraBG
    @AdirraBG 7 лет назад +1

    I am very happy I discovered your channel, Nathan! I am starting out as an interior photographer and your tutorials are super helpful - thank you! :)

  • @tommy2z2z
    @tommy2z2z 7 лет назад +1

    Great program, thank you!

  • @justreview3426
    @justreview3426 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the nice video!

  • @jeffj4530
    @jeffj4530 7 лет назад +1

    awesome, very helpful!

  • @omnivistapro
    @omnivistapro 6 лет назад +1

    Great info, Nathan. Made me decide to buy a gray card finally. You should have affiliate links for those & the flashes you use. Would love for you to get a cut.

    • @omnivistapro
      @omnivistapro 6 лет назад +1

      Glad I watched this video the other day because the next day I had to shoot a house with all colored ceilings and it was difficult. I didn't have the bounce card in time, but it helped me think about what to do

  • @joshualaird5303
    @joshualaird5303 2 года назад

    Seems like all i get anymore are peach walls with peach ceilings and dark wood floors.... ugh. It's a nightmare.

  • @samdavies624
    @samdavies624 3 года назад +1

    Hey Nathan - another epic video, it's been a pleasure learning from these and your books! Being based in Norway many properties for REP and tourism are wooden cabin types - soft wood floors ceilings and walls - would the same tips apply from this video or do you have any specific thoughts when it comes to being surrounded by pine?? Thanks!

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  3 года назад

      Hi Sam, I show how to light wooden rooms in my Lighting Guide, here's a link if you'd like to check that out: www.amazon.nl/dp/B089SB3RY3

  • @radosch
    @radosch 7 лет назад +2

    Hi Nathan - great video again, nice job!
    Question: Have you considered/tried to keep your light pointing straight up and position the larger white reflector a few feet directly above it (parallel with the ceiling - and close to it)? Wouldn't the resulting light be similar to one bounced off of a white ceiling?

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  7 лет назад +1

      That would direct the light down, not out, and I'd have to get on a ladder ;)

  • @zachhallphotography
    @zachhallphotography 5 лет назад

    Hey Nathan - another great vid! Keep up the great work! Just out of curiosity....when you shoot with direct, harsh speed/strobe light (straight into the room), when it comes to the post production of that image (harsh light) and ambient, do you blend those layers in 'normal' mode? I've noticed that luminosity mode can be very tricky in those situations (when you have harsh shadows) and doesn't work out so well, so 'normal mode' is what I tend to lean towards in these type of conditions but wanted to get your take on it. Thanks for all the great advice!

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  5 лет назад

      Hi Zach, I never shoot flash directly into a room; instead, it's bounced. On the blending mode, I use luminosity, except for certain repairs which I talk about in other videos and in my advanced editing book. If you are using normal blending mode then you are defeating the purpose of using lights and it's a sign that you are probably doing something wrong. My most recent video talks about one particular, and I also discuss this in greater detail in my interiors e-book at www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0755KXSL4?ref_=dbs_mng_calw_0&storeType=ebooks

  • @TheListerAssister
    @TheListerAssister 7 лет назад

    I love your videos and your book was excellent, I'm looking forward to the advanced book. Why not do a direct flash every time instead of a bounce since you need less power and the colors are truer? Since you're blending ambient you can get rid of any hard shadows?

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  7 лет назад

      It's because of the spread and fall-off, first thing discussed in the "Lighting" chapter: www.amazon.com/dp/B0755KXSL4

    • @TheListerAssister
      @TheListerAssister 7 лет назад +1

      Thank you, I did read and then re-read that chapter and understand the softness of bounced light. However, if we're only using the flash for color and to get rid of artifacts, I don't understand why we'd introduce color casts from bouncing off a ceiling (reflecting the floor) that you wouldn't have in a direct flash. Your videos are great and so is the book. I recommend for all.

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  7 лет назад +1

      Direct flash introduces shadows and uneven lighting (and subsequent color). Bounced light with good fall-off avoids all of that. Take home point: you want good fall-off for REP.

  • @ivan95941
    @ivan95941 4 года назад

    Thank you! I learned alot from you, i just have one question. I don't have a white reflector, but i do have a silver reflector. Do you think i can use that one instead?

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  4 года назад +1

      That's odd...most reflectors come with removable covers so you can switch from silver to white. Check if your reflector has a zipper, which allows you to remove the reflector material, turn it inside out, thus showing white. If not, then I'd suggest spending a few dollars to buy one, since silver is far too specular for most interior work. I cover reflectors and such in my new lighting guide as well at www.amazon.com/dp/B07Z9KKGCS

  • @justinthedesigner
    @justinthedesigner 4 года назад

    What are your thoughts about using a normal dish reflector with one of those soft white covers over the bulb?

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  4 года назад +1

      Since shots are diffused from bounces or STUs, the XPLOR600 diffuser's purpose is more for bulb protection than anything.

    • @justinthedesigner
      @justinthedesigner 4 года назад

      @@NathanCoolPhoto I see. Im actually using a ad200 with a white dome diffuser over the bulb. Would you suggest just take the white protector off and bounce directly off a white reflector or wall?

  • @JustinSteereMusic
    @JustinSteereMusic 7 лет назад

    Which strobe light are you using? Looking to buying one for myself for my properties and speed lights aren't removing some natural highlights so I'm window shopping strobe's at the moment.

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  7 лет назад

      XPLOR 600 or Rovelight, both available at Adorama, both 600WS, both great lights.

  • @D9everything
    @D9everything 7 лет назад

    Could you save a step by transferring your temp settings from the gray card shot to your ambient (since it's probably the next shot you'll take after the gray card shot) and then, with your lens correction/vertical etc. standard preset applied to your ambient plus the new temperature setting copy/paste to the other imports? I seem to recall that in one of your videos you mentioned to copy/paste everything BUT the white balance when you are applying to the other frames you are going to take into Photoshop. Perhaps I'm confused, although there are no hard and fast rules, by the order in which you take your shots and the fact that they differ from video to video. In your most recent video regarding the two-stop rule the workflow seems to be that you are taking the ambient first, followed by at least one flash shot with the exposure reduced via the shutter speed by around two stops or so. Here you mention you are taking the flash shot first. So, do you apply those color settings from the gray card shot to all shots (ambient/flash/pulls) or to just one of your choosing - say, only the shot that immediately follows the gray card shot? Sorry if I sound so obsessive compulsive on this one, but I'm really getting so much out of your videos and there's so much to take in (although the workflow is very streamlined once you get it!) Thanks

    • @NathanCoolPhoto
      @NathanCoolPhoto  7 лет назад

      Basically, you only want to copy WB from a grey-card frame to your base flash layer. More on that in my ebook: www.amazon.com/dp/B0755KXSL4

    • @justinthedesigner
      @justinthedesigner 4 года назад

      @@NathanCoolPhoto would love to see another tutorial on the science behind that grey card trick and maybe doing different types of in-camera white balance as well as post white balance. - just a thought for a future vid.