My response to this is while yes you’re lacking in your natural vitamin D which is important. I live in El Paso, Texas. 364 days of the year are always over exposed and forces me to shoot in only sunrise sunset hours. I recently went to San Francisco with all the fog and I couldn’t have been happier. I was actually able to take my camera out all day with me and nothing was over exposed
I hear this a lot. I think the problem is if you're only looking for light contrast to compose. I stopped composing light for a while to focus more on colour in my compositions, and I found the boring light the best for that, because the only contrast in the scene was colour contrast I had to develop my eye to find, rather than light and dark, so there were less distractions. I actually prefer overcast, damp days to harsh light days for photography. I'd be more likely to shoot monochrome in harsh light because I'm focusing on the light contrast anyway. However, I also prefer blue hour to golden hour so I might just be the minority. 😂 One tip that might help, is ditching the wide lens for a while, just to take the sky out of the equation. Get closer, start with detail and colour abstracts, and then slowly pull back as you get an eye for spotting great colour contrasts in scenes. Also, push the saturation up and the contrast up in camera so you're not looking at neutral shots of neutral scenes. Give Velvia at -3 Color a chance, and cooler white balances like 4500k - 5300k. It could help you to previsualise a style, and then when you get home pick the colours to desaturate. ✨
Dude, I love your videos. They are so rich with information and minimal talks regarding gear. The creative content you produce are inspiring and make me want to go out in these "difficult" conditions to take photos more often. Thanks for the inspiration, and I hope to see many more videos to come!
I think flat, grey, overcast days lend themselves really well to black and white photography if you apply the high contrast environment tip suggested in this video. It gives off a vastly different look to that of a black and white image created with sunlight and shadows plus is a lot trickier to achieve, lending to much more of a challenge. Plenty of scope for post processing too. I certainly learn more shooting in less than ideal light as it requires I put in much more effort.
Being Seattle based, very relatable! I love all the tips here, I feel like sometimes I just forget things and then I watch your videos and you make it sound so easy, always inspiring!
Man, I find your videos so helpful and packed with great information. I haven't even heard of the over exposure technique after watching and reading photography tips for a long time. Thank you!!
THANK YOU SO SO SO MUCH!!!! I live in shanghai, this days the weather is boring ,but after watching your video, I learned a lot, and then decide to go out and try to capture something interesting!!!
This is going to be very relatable to me, I live in Melbourne Australia, by far the cloudiest place in Aus, find myself feeling very envious of these beautiful colours I see from photographers across the world.
I am really glad that I found your channel. I have bought myself a Fujifilm camera as a retirement present but am finding getting back to photography mind blowing. Your videos are simple, informative and give me just enough to absorb in one go. Thanks for the inspiration and keep up the great work.
I got a full minute into this video impressed by you choosing to show everything in really bad lighting, even when you're talking to the camera. Then i remembered i had turned the screen brightness on my phone way down. 😂 great video!
Great post. Your advise is right on and your samples are both relevant and exquisite. You've got more practical, applicable tips in ten minutes then you'd see in a hundred other photography videos.
As always I love your realistic approach and solid tips to save the day when traveling and the location you are in does not have the magical light we all want. Thank you so much for consistently promoting photography for mere mortals
Fantastic video with a set of solid tips on how to shoot in the sort of light that the UK has for the majority of the year. Another great chapter in the Roman Fox photography encyclopedia. Thanks for making the video, Roman. 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
thanks for a very inspirational video, that's a really interesting and overlooked set of ideas. I particularly love your comment "if you're a 'properly exposed', histogram-in-the-middle-enthusiast, then you might want to skip this because you're feelings are going to be hurt"
Excellent workshop. Living in the Pacific Northwest I’ve tuned my photography to deal with shades of gray, and I shoot mainly monochrome as a result. But it can be madness to manage highlights and contrast. Plus I just purchased Luminar Neo, so this video was very timely. Thanks.
Really appreciate these kinds of tips! The weather here is usually exactly like that, grey and rain..! Thanks for the video, it's good to be inspired and reminded that great pictures can be taken anyway 👍
The biggest issue with overcast is finding a subject that stands out. So take all those things you think about such as it being a sad, dreary, boring, etc. day and lean into it. Easy subject: A girl in a beautiful dress, side profile, has a light shine on her back subtlety, like the headlights from your car set to parking lights so it's orange. Have some trees in the background, that can be a silhouette, blur them out, they'll be black anyway but just something to contrast the grey sky (grey sky, dark black trees, highlights from cloud shift). Take that shot with moody in mind. To take things up, make sure it's a windy day and her hair is blowing. Now tell her to imagine her husband died or she's going through a break up. Her depressed state will contrast with the beautiful dress. Another approach is to not even worry about the sky. Grab a flash, underexpose the background by -1 or -2 and use the flash to light your subject. Don't worry about lighting their face. This is where having a good wardrobe stylist come in clutch b/c the shoot isn't on the person but on the fabric. So light the clothing with a soft flash. You only need 1 light, use a beauty dish. Sticking with portraits, you can use a very low angle and as long as you have a good subject you can literally underexpose by -1 or -2 and shoot them at a low angle (looking up to the sky in matrix metering). Set your white balance to blue (cool, 4300K, 3000k, 2500k). Again stay with moody. You can also contrast with warm tones of the outfit. Red is your friend in overcast. I'll make another comment.
I was just looking this video. It’s a lot helpful. I am Seattle, USA and finding good lights is not possible as it’s always overcast weather. This was really helpful specifically 3 stop exposure and color contrast. Thanks !!
Great advice! I'll try that during my next photo walk. We may not have London fog in Moselle, but we do have grey skies pretty often :) One thing I might add is that this type of light makes it easy to capture nice portraits since you don't have harsh shadows on faces.
Great video. The first time I saw you editing with Luminar. Saved the video straight away. I've been working with Adobe in the past, but very happy for a year now with Luminar Neo. I would love to see more videos. Thanks Roman!
Amazing! I was JUST thinking about this today. I live in Nairobi and we’re going through our dreary season. It’s the best time of the year to see the great migration of the Buffalo, and the light is so dull. Just in time, and thanks for the tips! Especially the editing 🙏🏼
I have heard some say there is not such thing as bad light, just more challenging light. The tips show one can get interesting photos under any lighting condition.
Thanks Roman for sharing. I agree with using color and deviating from the rules to make shots more interesting. Editing can be SO subjective! I think you give some good tips that anyone can use though, apart from taste.
Great advice and I will definitely look at the software. I think that living in the uk I have found myself converting to bnw a great deal, this advice will be incredibly useful considering the poor weather we have had this year.
Really nice demonstration Roman. One habit I often fall into is not raising exposure enough. Not sure why, but I sometimes leave my images a bit too much on the dark side. I think I worry things will look overexposed when in fact they are visible! LOL! Have a rockin' day!
Awesome video again Roman..i can relate to shooting when i have free time due work and adulting...will have to note this and write this down for yhe future
Really inspired by your videos and getting so many ideas from the lighting ones. Was hoping to see which presets you would use, just bought yours, so hope you are back to lightroom soon 😏.
I live in Portland, Oregon in the US. It can be nearly as gray as London. As we’re going into fall I’m watching this video to prevent myself from going insane 😅 thanks
We have the opposite issue here in SW Texas. Harsh, strong light most of the day. Great for infrared, but a real challenge if you want to shoot anything else outside of Golden/Blue Hours.
Nice one, instant sub, very lovely footage blend and your shots are excellent, please leave them hanging a sec or two longer while you're at it :) Luminar Neo workflow seems logical and helpful at first glance. 2:45 on blanket grey sky - there's a video or two in itself there and I guess tripod and/or strong IBIS or noise reduction is inevitable when shooting in 'boring' light. Gonna try monochrome liveview, somehow the colors hide the basic shapes and spaces of a scene at first glance, for my eyes.
Hi and thanks for an excellent youtube page. Normally I agree with you on most things and get a lot of great insights and tips on how to move forward in my quest to become a better photographer. But! precisely in this, I don't quite agree with you about the idea of overexposing to make the sky white, because gloomy and gray skies in particular create such an amazing amount of mood. possibly one can both underexpose and overexpose and merge in post to create both. All of this depends on what you want out of the picture. Maybe it's just me who is that slightly depressed melancholic type. All the best Anders Mohlin Stockholm.
Overcast days are wonderful if you want to get some nice portrait work done. You don't get squinting and deep shadows across your subject's face. There's an ideal subject for every type of light, and photography is more fun if you can be flexible, rather than trying to force a shot in the wrong light
Getting closer to take detail shots rather than sweeping vistas also makes bad light, whether overcast or harsh sun, less of a problem. In fact the soft even light on overcast days can be an advantage in some cases.
Overcast Portrait Session: Have a model dress in a red trench coat. Hopefully long hair. Tell them the focus will be hair movement. Set your WB to around 4200K or 3000K, underexpose by 1 stop. Shoot in a neutral profile. Pull up the exposure in post as needed. Turn up the red in post. Add a little (little) bit of contrast. No heavy stuff.
Great video and tips as always! 👍 Maybe, in these low-light, overcast, rain and foggy situations, Multi-Exposure, built in option in the camera, let's say (-0.5/0/+0.5) or some other adjusted range in settings can help, too.
I prefer overcast days to bright, sunny days. The light is perfect because the sky turns into a giant softbox of perfectly diffused, even lighting. It's perfect for portraits and street photography. Sunny days are only good when you're looking for contrast with light and shadow. But I'm also from Arizona where it gets hot as fuck. Our good days are your heatwaves, so we prefer the cloudy, overcast because we actually get to go outside without dying.
As always a brilliant video. It's always like opening a present and finding that it's what you wanted and needed. Keep these presents coming please. One question. When you advise to over expose do you do that manually or with the exposure compensation? Thank you, Keep up with this amazing work. You help so many people.
Out of the grey ? Learning photography from you 🙏... I have recently bought FUJIFILM XT30 II with XC15-45mm F3.5-5.6 OIS PZ kit lens for Streetphotography and daily shooting purpose.
@@snapsbyfoxI just got a Q3 love how simple it is to use, but having trouble getting used to the 28mm and especially the focusing after coming from Sony.
@@sailslikeagirl3154 Yeah, I was unsure at first, but once I got used to it, I really like it for that everyday-carry sort of use; but it's not going to replace my Fujifilm gear -- other than I think I'll be selling/trading my X100V, since I haven't touched it in a couple months now.
Though your vid is pretty good and helpful I admit I am the guy who never pull the trigger in bad light. Hard shadows are central element of my photography. If there are none there'll be no photos
When you don't know what you don't know...I've just started photography and alot of the time I have available to shoot is in this lighting situation. 🤷
Being UK based, I don't think I've ever seen a more relatable photography video in a long time. It's grey and boring 300+ days a year here 😂
Hard to argue with that lol Look up the work of Saul Leiter, some of his work is more relevant to our lovely weather :)
Ha ha, so true!
Denmark approves of this video too hahaha
@@ryonatkinson6637 I've lived here all of my life...and guarantee we don't. Thanks for your helpful comment ✌️
My response to this is while yes you’re lacking in your natural vitamin D which is important. I live in El Paso, Texas. 364 days of the year are always over exposed and forces me to shoot in only sunrise sunset hours. I recently went to San Francisco with all the fog and I couldn’t have been happier. I was actually able to take my camera out all day with me and nothing was over exposed
I hear this a lot. I think the problem is if you're only looking for light contrast to compose. I stopped composing light for a while to focus more on colour in my compositions, and I found the boring light the best for that, because the only contrast in the scene was colour contrast I had to develop my eye to find, rather than light and dark, so there were less distractions. I actually prefer overcast, damp days to harsh light days for photography. I'd be more likely to shoot monochrome in harsh light because I'm focusing on the light contrast anyway.
However, I also prefer blue hour to golden hour so I might just be the minority. 😂
One tip that might help, is ditching the wide lens for a while, just to take the sky out of the equation. Get closer, start with detail and colour abstracts, and then slowly pull back as you get an eye for spotting great colour contrasts in scenes.
Also, push the saturation up and the contrast up in camera so you're not looking at neutral shots of neutral scenes. Give Velvia at -3 Color a chance, and cooler white balances like 4500k - 5300k. It could help you to previsualise a style, and then when you get home pick the colours to desaturate. ✨
This sounds like good advice, thank you - looking forward to trying some of these tips
Dude, I love your videos. They are so rich with information and minimal talks regarding gear. The creative content you produce are inspiring and make me want to go out in these "difficult" conditions to take photos more often. Thanks for the inspiration, and I hope to see many more videos to come!
I think flat, grey, overcast days lend themselves really well to black and white photography if you apply the high contrast environment tip suggested in this video. It gives off a vastly different look to that of a black and white image created with sunlight and shadows plus is a lot trickier to achieve, lending to much more of a challenge. Plenty of scope for post processing too. I certainly learn more shooting in less than ideal light as it requires I put in much more effort.
Being Seattle based, very relatable! I love all the tips here, I feel like sometimes I just forget things and then I watch your videos and you make it sound so easy, always inspiring!
Man, I find your videos so helpful and packed with great information. I haven't even heard of the over exposure technique after watching and reading photography tips for a long time. Thank you!!
Enjoying this little tips series !
Cheers!
THANK YOU SO SO SO MUCH!!!! I live in shanghai, this days the weather is boring ,but after watching your video, I learned a lot, and then decide to go out and try to capture something interesting!!!
Love seeing the editing process. Never heard of Neo, but it looks way less busy than C1 and Lightroom.
Very informative, thank you! I also love flat lighting. It offers lots of options and possibilities.
Perfect tips for the grubby weather in the "summer" here in Germany. Thank you! 👍
I've been shooting for just about 2 decades and this is genuinely a nice tips and tricks video
Appreciated! The summer has not been brilliant...
This is going to be very relatable to me, I live in Melbourne Australia, by far the cloudiest place in Aus, find myself feeling very envious of these beautiful colours I see from photographers across the world.
I am really glad that I found your channel. I have bought myself a Fujifilm camera as a retirement present but am finding getting back to photography mind blowing. Your videos are simple, informative and give me just enough to absorb in one go. Thanks for the inspiration and keep up the great work.
I got a full minute into this video impressed by you choosing to show everything in really bad lighting, even when you're talking to the camera. Then i remembered i had turned the screen brightness on my phone way down. 😂 great video!
Thank you for sharing your tips for exposure and editing!
Very inspiring. Thanks. Will go Thursday morning before work and consider your tips.
Thank you, I now feel inspired rather than deterred by those ever present dull days.👍
Great post. Your advise is right on and your samples are both relevant and exquisite. You've got more practical, applicable tips in ten minutes then you'd see in a hundred other photography videos.
As always I love your realistic approach and solid tips to save the day when traveling and the location you are in does not have the magical light we all want. Thank you so much for consistently promoting photography for mere mortals
Fantastic video with a set of solid tips on how to shoot in the sort of light that the UK has for the majority of the year.
Another great chapter in the Roman Fox photography encyclopedia.
Thanks for making the video, Roman.
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
thanks for a very inspirational video, that's a really interesting and overlooked set of ideas. I particularly love your comment "if you're a 'properly exposed', histogram-in-the-middle-enthusiast, then you might want to skip this because you're feelings are going to be hurt"
subscription earned!
Excellent workshop. Living in the Pacific Northwest I’ve tuned my photography to deal with shades of gray, and I shoot mainly monochrome as a result. But it can be madness to manage highlights and contrast. Plus I just purchased Luminar Neo, so this video was very timely. Thanks.
Really appreciate these kinds of tips! The weather here is usually exactly like that, grey and rain..! Thanks for the video, it's good to be inspired and reminded that great pictures can be taken anyway 👍
The biggest issue with overcast is finding a subject that stands out.
So take all those things you think about such as it being a sad, dreary, boring, etc. day and lean into it.
Easy subject: A girl in a beautiful dress, side profile, has a light shine on her back subtlety, like the headlights from your car set to parking lights so it's orange. Have some trees in the background, that can be a silhouette, blur them out, they'll be black anyway but just something to contrast the grey sky (grey sky, dark black trees, highlights from cloud shift). Take that shot with moody in mind. To take things up, make sure it's a windy day and her hair is blowing. Now tell her to imagine her husband died or she's going through a break up. Her depressed state will contrast with the beautiful dress.
Another approach is to not even worry about the sky. Grab a flash, underexpose the background by -1 or -2 and use the flash to light your subject. Don't worry about lighting their face. This is where having a good wardrobe stylist come in clutch b/c the shoot isn't on the person but on the fabric. So light the clothing with a soft flash. You only need 1 light, use a beauty dish.
Sticking with portraits, you can use a very low angle and as long as you have a good subject you can literally underexpose by -1 or -2 and shoot them at a low angle (looking up to the sky in matrix metering). Set your white balance to blue (cool, 4300K, 3000k, 2500k). Again stay with moody.
You can also contrast with warm tones of the outfit. Red is your friend in overcast.
I'll make another comment.
I was just looking this video. It’s a lot helpful. I am Seattle, USA and finding good lights is not possible as it’s always overcast weather. This was really helpful specifically 3 stop exposure and color contrast. Thanks !!
Great advice! I'll try that during my next photo walk. We may not have London fog in Moselle, but we do have grey skies pretty often :)
One thing I might add is that this type of light makes it easy to capture nice portraits since you don't have harsh shadows on faces.
We get quite a few dull cloudy days in Melbourne Australia so this is very useful
Hello from paris...Roman just wanted to tell u how instructive are your videos. Mate you simply roxxx
Love these Roman, suddenly find my self wishing for a boring grey day :)
Living in Brittany and actually coming back from a very dull/boring session, your video just pop in time 😂 Thanks 🙏
Love the mini series of how to capture great photos in “sun-optimal” conditions. Thanks for the helpful tips as always!
Great video. The first time I saw you editing with Luminar. Saved the video straight away. I've been working with Adobe in the past, but very happy for a year now with Luminar Neo. I would love to see more videos. Thanks Roman!
Helpful video thanks. Often I cop out on overcast days and go black and white.
Some great tips. Thank you!
Really useful tips. Thank you.
Great video with great advice! I actually like overcast weather for some kinds of photography
Amazing! I was JUST thinking about this today. I live in Nairobi and we’re going through our dreary season. It’s the best time of the year to see the great migration of the Buffalo, and the light is so dull. Just in time, and thanks for the tips! Especially the editing 🙏🏼
Super useful advices . Thanks Roman 👊🏽😀
thanks for this video, I live in the united states in a state that rains nine of the 12 months, so this is super helpful!
Super video - thank you :) Applies to both videography and photography.
I have heard some say there is not such thing as bad light, just more challenging light. The tips show one can get interesting photos under any lighting condition.
yeah I agree. I call it bad light simply because it's not my favourite and I can't get the images I like in such light. But you are correct
Thanks Roman for sharing. I agree with using color and deviating from the rules to make shots more interesting. Editing can be SO subjective! I think you give some good tips that anyone can use though, apart from taste.
Great tips man. Thanks so much Roman. ❤
Overcast days are my favorite for photography--I get much truer colors than on sunny days, with the shadows that distort color.
Great video and great editing style
This kind of videos
Very useful! I live in Belgium, and of course the weather is usually grey and rainy 😂 It will help a lot to improve most of my outside shootings
Very helpful! Thank you!
Great video buddy, very relatable
Great advice and I will definitely look at the software. I think that living in the uk I have found myself converting to bnw a great deal, this advice will be incredibly useful considering the poor weather we have had this year.
Very helpful, thank you
Good points in your video. B/W is under-rated by many as an option. Happy to see you use Luminar Neo. Just discovered it to edit my fuji shots! 😎
Really nice demonstration Roman. One habit I often fall into is not raising exposure enough. Not sure why, but I sometimes leave my images a bit too much on the dark side. I think I worry things will look overexposed when in fact they are visible! LOL! Have a rockin' day!
Awesome video again Roman..i can relate to shooting when i have free time due work and adulting...will have to note this and write this down for yhe future
Thanks!
Another great video.
Subscribed.
Great tips, as always...
Really inspired by your videos and getting so many ideas from the lighting ones. Was hoping to see which presets you would use, just bought yours, so hope you are back to lightroom soon 😏.
I live in Portland, Oregon in the US. It can be nearly as gray as London. As we’re going into fall I’m watching this video to prevent myself from going insane 😅 thanks
Excellent advice, as always. ❤
Thanks!
Great stuff 🙏
We have the opposite issue here in SW Texas. Harsh, strong light most of the day. Great for infrared, but a real challenge if you want to shoot anything else outside of Golden/Blue Hours.
Nice one, instant sub, very lovely footage blend and your shots are excellent, please leave them hanging a sec or two longer while you're at it :) Luminar Neo workflow seems logical and helpful at first glance.
2:45 on blanket grey sky - there's a video or two in itself there and I guess tripod and/or strong IBIS or noise reduction is inevitable when shooting in 'boring' light.
Gonna try monochrome liveview, somehow the colors hide the basic shapes and spaces of a scene at first glance, for my eyes.
Did no one else spot Faizal? :D
Great tips!
Hi and thanks for an excellent youtube page.
Normally I agree with you on most things and get a lot of great insights and tips on how to move forward in my quest to become a better photographer. But! precisely in this, I don't quite agree with you about the idea of overexposing to make the sky white, because gloomy and gray skies in particular create such an amazing amount of mood. possibly one can both underexpose and overexpose and merge in post to create both. All of this depends on what you want out of the picture. Maybe it's just me who is that slightly depressed melancholic type. All the best Anders Mohlin Stockholm.
Love the vid, love the channel. Cheers🎉
Overcast days are wonderful if you want to get some nice portrait work done. You don't get squinting and deep shadows across your subject's face.
There's an ideal subject for every type of light, and photography is more fun if you can be flexible, rather than trying to force a shot in the wrong light
Getting closer to take detail shots rather than sweeping vistas also makes bad light, whether overcast or harsh sun, less of a problem. In fact the soft even light on overcast days can be an advantage in some cases.
Yeah. I know many portrait photographers love overcast days.
Thank you ❤
Thanks for the nice tips. Very useful. How was your experience with the Leica? Fuji better ? :)
Thank you
Overcast Portrait Session: Have a model dress in a red trench coat. Hopefully long hair. Tell them the focus will be hair movement.
Set your WB to around 4200K or 3000K, underexpose by 1 stop. Shoot in a neutral profile. Pull up the exposure in post as needed.
Turn up the red in post. Add a little (little) bit of contrast. No heavy stuff.
You finaly came to Putney nice one what do you think about riverside bridges rowing clubs etc??
Great video and tips as always! 👍 Maybe, in these low-light, overcast, rain and foggy situations, Multi-Exposure, built in option in the camera, let's say (-0.5/0/+0.5) or some other adjusted range in settings can help, too.
Thank you for sharing Roman, do you prefer to use Lightroom or luminar? Just curious. Thank you!
I prefer overcast days to bright, sunny days. The light is perfect because the sky turns into a giant softbox of perfectly diffused, even lighting. It's perfect for portraits and street photography. Sunny days are only good when you're looking for contrast with light and shadow. But I'm also from Arizona where it gets hot as fuck. Our good days are your heatwaves, so we prefer the cloudy, overcast because we actually get to go outside without dying.
As always a brilliant video. It's always like opening a present and finding that it's what you wanted and needed. Keep these presents coming please.
One question. When you advise to over expose do you do that manually or with the exposure compensation?
Thank you, Keep up with this amazing work. You help so many people.
For me personally, I expose manually and only use exposure compensation if I'm using an auto mode such as auto ISO.
Out of the grey ? Learning photography from you 🙏... I have recently bought FUJIFILM XT30 II with XC15-45mm F3.5-5.6 OIS PZ kit lens for Streetphotography and daily shooting purpose.
valid 364 day a year in UK! so we need to go to Paris or Venice to get lousy weather?
4:35 -- Did you get a Leica Q3? (Love the used Q2 I gifted myself a few months ago.)
oh no.. my mate was using one. Not sure if it's for me tbh. The build quality however is outstanding
@@snapsbyfoxI just got a Q3 love how simple it is to use, but having trouble getting used to the 28mm and especially the focusing after coming from Sony.
@@sailslikeagirl3154 Yeah, I was unsure at first, but once I got used to it, I really like it for that everyday-carry sort of use; but it's not going to replace my Fujifilm gear -- other than I think I'll be selling/trading my X100V, since I haven't touched it in a couple months now.
Great thanks
Hi!! I noticed you use luminar. Do you prefer vs Lightroom?
Very helpful, thank you Justin Timberlake
Hello,
do you think it is better shooting in BW directly and doing it during post-processing?
Hey Roman, do you use Lightroom exclusively or do you also use Lightroom Classic?
Very interesting. Boring light doesn't only exist in UK...
Unrelated but I think if you flip your key light in your direct to camera shot, it’ll look just a bit better.
Though your vid is pretty good and helpful I admit I am the guy who never pull the trigger in bad light. Hard shadows are central element of my photography. If there are none there'll be no photos
Overcast light is not boring
Bro i have exactly the same pic of the tower bridge in the center😂🔥
For b&w, overexposed the image and shoot a high contrast film like Tri-X (or boost the contrast in digital camera).
Excelente vídeo como siempre, sabes o alguien sabe si luminar tiene versión para tablet? Gracias
Thanks! hmm not sure, need to look
Gracias
For scenic shots overcast is not great, but for portraits overcast is very good.
Thanks, I live in Poland on the coast and the light sucks 80% of the time 😂
It's light. Make adjustments on your camera, in your brain, get the picture.
I find Luminar Neo a lot easier to use the night room because of the AI features. The only thing that light room wins on is the masking.
Ljubljana 🤍
Change it up: use 1:1 or 2.7:1 image format
When you don't know what you don't know...I've just started photography and alot of the time I have available to shoot is in this lighting situation. 🤷