How to make a black background when Photographing flowers or insects

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 14 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 54

  • @TDtog2112
    @TDtog2112 7 дней назад +50

    `I love flowers and insects' and then proceeds to smack a bee into the middle of next week 😂😂😂😂

    • @CNCTurboStep
      @CNCTurboStep 6 дней назад +2

      It‘s not in the bees best interest to sting you, so it won‘t if you leave it alone.

    • @lydmarl.475
      @lydmarl.475 6 дней назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @jonhosgood6852
      @jonhosgood6852 3 дня назад

      @@CNCTurboStep It was a bumblebee - they don't have a sting

    • @stepoutside_photo
      @stepoutside_photo 3 дня назад

      @@jonhosgood6852 No? Google for "Do bumble bees sting". Unlike honey bees, they (the females) can actually sting multiple times, but they rarely sting at all. They're not aggressive and are unlikely to be provoked unless you threaten or try to swat them (as demonstrated in the video!). Just leave them alone, and they'll leave you alone.

    • @TroyQwert
      @TroyQwert 3 дня назад +1

      Self protection, natural reaction... 😊

  • @ronin5th
    @ronin5th 17 часов назад +1

    Thank you. You never see wilderness photography where the photographer is "BEEing" attacked. Love it.

  • @TeddyCavachon
    @TeddyCavachon 3 дня назад +3

    From 1974-77 I worked in the photo lab at National Geographic and one of my colleagues named Harry Yen who worked making large color prints was a wildlife macro photographer as a hobbyist but so good the magazine did a feature on his photographs.
    Something he would do for background for close-ups of flowers was to bring along sheets of black mat board and pastel chalks and create ‘painted’ background with colors similar to the flowers, a technique I’ve copied on occasion. I’ve also just used a black sheet of mat board and then painting int the colors in a blank layer in Photoshop.

  • @emadigan523
    @emadigan523 2 дня назад +2

    Genius idea! Thank you for sharing.

  • @BommeltjeNL
    @BommeltjeNL 6 дней назад +2

    Now that’s interesting. I always thought they photographed these at night and I was wondering how they got the flowers to open up at night 😂😂 Thanks for the tip 👍

  • @pfsines
    @pfsines 2 дня назад

    Like so many things, after you explain it, it sounds like "why didn't I think of this before?"... AFTER you explained it. Thanks for sharing.

  • @ArtManNL
    @ArtManNL 2 дня назад +1

    I didn't know this. Thank you for sharing!

  • @RickMahoney2013
    @RickMahoney2013 3 дня назад

    I get up every morning to Lear sometimes new every day, great stuff .

  • @dawei566
    @dawei566 День назад

    Take 1 : Love insects and flowers.
    Take 2 : Smack the bee 😅
    Take all your points. Thank you 🙏

  • @markbarkntrunk102
    @markbarkntrunk102 7 дней назад +1

    Loved them very good way of doing it

  • @leeo.alexander2324
    @leeo.alexander2324 4 дня назад

    I am a member of a photo club (Wichita Wildlight Photographic Society - WWPS), and your approach to shooting flowers is very informative. I will pass this on to the members of the club that shoot this genre will be most pleased.

  • @mauriciolee7349
    @mauriciolee7349 6 дней назад

    Thank Dean for this video with EFFECTIVE instructions.

  • @dirkgibbens377
    @dirkgibbens377 2 дня назад

    This was fascinating!! I am a hobbyist photographer and have never seen that technique. I will definitely give it a try. Thanks for the video!
    Edit: What power setting do you use on the flash?

  • @Arripa-777
    @Arripa-777 Месяц назад +4

    Great tip ! Thank you ! 🌻

  • @brendamilstein1062
    @brendamilstein1062 6 дней назад +1

    Wow I found this very interesting especially as I want to learn how to use flash

  • @aeiq1219
    @aeiq1219 5 дней назад

    Absolutely beautiful work!!!! thank you for the photography lesson.🍻🍺🍺

  • @ridderus
    @ridderus 13 часов назад

    I use this techniec in studio with portraits, :)

  • @richarddmogg1
    @richarddmogg1 3 часа назад

    Well, I've just learned something new and it's only 4 am... What to do with the rest of the day? Thanks Dean,

  • @amitdutta8768
    @amitdutta8768 3 дня назад

    Very innovative and simple technique !! Thanks Dean. 😊

  • @alanworland9478
    @alanworland9478 13 дней назад +10

    Surely the shutter speed can only effectively be used up to the max sync speed of the camera? Great images!

    • @mikebyers1690
      @mikebyers1690 6 дней назад +2

      If you set shutter to 1/30 sec and max sync speed is 1/250 that is3 stops underexposed for the background. Set the shutter to something faster than 1/250 and when you turn the flash on it comes Back to max sync speed. Flash exposes for foreground and background is 3 stops underexposed. Anything faster than max sync gives banding on the flash component of the image.

    • @mikebyers1690
      @mikebyers1690 6 дней назад

      He also sets exposure at f11 and then steps to f14 without changing shutter speed so that’s another 2 stops of light reduction.

    • @mikebyers1690
      @mikebyers1690 6 дней назад

      Sorry got the f11 to f14 wrong still a reduction in light from original settings

    • @Graham_Wood
      @Graham_Wood 4 дня назад +1

      I'm guessing he is using high speed sync, otherwise you will get a partially exposed frame. Some flashguns automatically switch to HSS if you set the shutter speed faster than the sync speed.

  • @bobclarie
    @bobclarie 3 дня назад +1

    Very nice ! I presume your flash is High Speed Sync capable. Best, Bob

  • @geoffreygriffiths1487
    @geoffreygriffiths1487 15 дней назад

    Great tip, oddly I use a similar technique indoors but never thought of using it outdoors.

  • @uhaggar
    @uhaggar 2 дня назад

    Thanks Dean, I'll definitely give this ago, I will just need to get a flash adaptor with a cable so I can use my flash hand held 🙌

  • @WilliamParmley
    @WilliamParmley 4 дня назад

    I use this same technique with one addition -- I use a variable neutral density filter. After I compose the scene I crank the ND filter down to black everything out. I use a handheld flash with a radio trigger. It works a treat!

  • @iainwood7971
    @iainwood7971 2 месяца назад +2

    Lovely images Dean. Thanks for sharing.

  • @peterhewitson71
    @peterhewitson71 4 дня назад

    Very cool always wondered how they did that , Cheers

  • @d1m18
    @d1m18 4 дня назад

    Thank you for sharing

  • @cbimage
    @cbimage 6 дней назад

    Thanks, that was very useful.

  • @ramipo1
    @ramipo1 6 дней назад +1

    which lens did you used?

  • @markielinhart
    @markielinhart 6 дней назад

    So good. Thanks Dean✌️🇦🇺

  • @GMC43
    @GMC43 4 дня назад

    Brilliant

  • @martinh.santana8187
    @martinh.santana8187 3 дня назад +1

    You love insects, right?

  • @pwolkowicki
    @pwolkowicki 3 дня назад +2

    1/1000s ? Don't you need a flash with HSS???

    • @miklosnemeth8566
      @miklosnemeth8566 3 дня назад +1

      Possibly his flash is HSS, unless the camera is the brutal Sony A9III with its global shutter

  • @Bob-g1i
    @Bob-g1i 4 дня назад

    If your flash head zooms, zoom it to a narrower beam. Also, use the back edge of the beam to illuminate the flower so there is no spill on the black background, ie other plants.

  • @bobwallace5443
    @bobwallace5443 8 дней назад

    I did enjoy thanx, something new to try, me 2 don't use lightroom etc...why would you...

  • @bwrouse450
    @bwrouse450 2 дня назад

    Flash sync at high shutter speeds? My camera syncs at max 1/160 sec.

  • @samirouriarhli9604
    @samirouriarhli9604 14 дней назад

    Congratulations, i am New in this hobby and i want to know what kind of Lens you use. Thanks a lot

  • @ericwebb1301
    @ericwebb1301 4 дня назад

    Or work the trick in post, using subject - or object - mask, invert, reduce exposure of the background to taste. If neither subject nor object masking provide a clean selection, colour and/or brightness masking may help, whether alone or intersected.

  • @MikeKleinsteuber
    @MikeKleinsteuber 2 дня назад

    Just do it in post in Midjourney.

  • @uwemoebus
    @uwemoebus 6 дней назад +1

    Bumblebees are harmeless,

  • @anthonyko8091
    @anthonyko8091 6 дней назад

    I won’t whack a bee like that cause you never know what happen next 😅

  • @herberthieke9638
    @herberthieke9638 26 дней назад +5

    The actions around 5.28 seems like an idiot than a bee lover, aren`t they?

  • @mostlymessingabout
    @mostlymessingabout День назад

    i don't like black... a bit of background is more natural