Absolutely Enchanted to see behind your final pictures . I’m in the photography Bussiness (reportage) since a looong time. But new to it thanks to Rich Baum. Today real estate represents my main income. I never had to deal with postproduction before . So your lasso work and lot of little insignificant things to you in PS are big mountains for me to climb up. But for sure, you help me growing. Thank you Matthew.
nice video! its not easy to make video for youtube and job at the same time. I like this video because you showed the truth of the real life with all things we have to deal with as a photoraphers ))) really like it. Thank you.
Good video! Thank you for sharing, trying to learn some of the techniques for photography with a more architectural slant to them (both in cam and in post) and this is a big help, thank you!
Another awesome tutorial. Do you mind sharing how you balance the WB in lightroom? Especially how to adjust the WB for those of ambient exposure and those of the flash to match, as they have different color temperature. Thank you.
thank you for this video and sharing your thoughts of this scene, is it possible to get this result without soft box and manipulating everything by photoshop?
Good insight on the process. When shooting the flash frames do you underexpose compared to the ambient shot? If so how many stops underexposed do you typically work with?
Great video man! Just curious - how does this method of shooting an editing fit into the overall workflow? If you're shooting an entire home, wouldn't this level of blending take an astronomical amount of time? I'm a portrait and lifestyle photographer, but I'm extremely passionate about interiors and I really want to start shooting more real estate this year.
I thought you use the bracketing system to take these pictures. let me know if you use it or not, and when should a beginner should use it or not please.
Nice video. I have a problem with long exposure photos in scenes with windows, it gets a bloom effect and messes with the color around the window, looks dirty and cannot use these photo for blending, but I really need it because the interior is better lit. I use a Canon eos rebel t7i (apsc sensor) with 10-18 mm lens. Does the problem comes with the camera and lens? Just to know if a better camere could help me get rid of it or if there is another solution. I don't use flash, but to get rid of it, I bought a lamp to light the area, but it takes too much time, more than I already do (almost 15 ~ 30 minutes per photo). In your photos you don't light the windows, and the walls look clean, it doesn't have that bloom effect. Could I send you the photos in your instagram account so you could understand me better? It could really help me a lot, it is driving me crazy.
This is the worst workout video I’ve ever seen
Oddly enough, this video was sponsored by Jazzercise 🤔
Absolutely Enchanted to see behind your final pictures . I’m in the photography Bussiness (reportage) since a looong time. But new to it thanks to Rich Baum. Today real estate represents my main income. I never had to deal with postproduction before . So your lasso work and lot of little insignificant things to you in PS are big mountains for me to climb up. But for sure, you help me growing. Thank you Matthew.
nice video! its not easy to make video for youtube and job at the same time. I like this video because you showed the truth of the real life with all things we have to deal with as a photoraphers ))) really like it. Thank you.
Thanks for sharing this video and I would like to congratulate you for being open and vocal on your mistakes....keep going
Thanks so much! Yeah I’m going to try to do my best to be authentically real on these videos.
Good video! Thank you for sharing, trying to learn some of the techniques for photography with a more architectural slant to them (both in cam and in post) and this is a big help, thank you!
Would love to see a more detailed video on how you blend all those layers in photoshop
Awesome video! Really enjoyed following along.
Thank you so much for sharing. Your video really helps me out!
I appreciate that! Thank you so much :-)
Great video!
Another awesome tutorial. Do you mind sharing how you balance the WB in lightroom? Especially how to adjust the WB for those of ambient exposure and those of the flash to match, as they have different color temperature. Thank you.
Thank you for your sharing, thanks from China
This is so helpful!
Very comprehensive video, thank you. I have a question, how do you set the power of your flash without it being too bright or too dark
thank you for this video and sharing your thoughts of this scene, is it possible to get this result without soft box and manipulating everything by photoshop?
Good insight on the process. When shooting the flash frames do you underexpose compared to the ambient shot? If so how many stops underexposed do you typically work with?
Yeah sometimes I’ll underexpose a bit and add flash. On average I’ll underexpose about 1 stop
Great video man! Just curious - how does this method of shooting an editing fit into the overall workflow? If you're shooting an entire home, wouldn't this level of blending take an astronomical amount of time? I'm a portrait and lifestyle photographer, but I'm extremely passionate about interiors and I really want to start shooting more real estate this year.
I thought you use the bracketing system to take these pictures. let me know if you use it or not, and when should a beginner should use it or not please.
Sorry just to clarify - when you say hand blend do you mean you invert the mask and with a white brush you just show the lit part you want?
Yes
You didn't call it part two, making it hard to find.
Nice video. I have a problem with long exposure photos in scenes with windows, it gets a bloom effect and messes with the color around the window, looks dirty and cannot use these photo for blending, but I really need it because the interior is better lit.
I use a Canon eos rebel t7i (apsc sensor) with 10-18 mm lens. Does the problem comes with the camera and lens? Just to know if a better camere could help me get rid of it or if there is another solution.
I don't use flash, but to get rid of it, I bought a lamp to light the area, but it takes too much time, more than I already do (almost 15 ~ 30 minutes per photo). In your photos you don't light the windows, and the walls look clean, it doesn't have that bloom effect.
Could I send you the photos in your instagram account so you could understand me better? It could really help me a lot, it is driving me crazy.
Hice vids. I assume you import all your files into LR as 16 bits? Do you also edit 16-bit in PSD or 8?
(photo.janmalmstrom.com/)
Yes, import into Lightroom as 16 bit and edit in PS as 16 bit. But most files I deliver to clients are exported as 8 bit JPEGs
Yep, I thought so. I do the same. (I see a spelling mistake... It should of course be 'Nice vids'.)
Thank you for your sharing, thanks from China