Love your tutorials Mo and this kid is definitely really talented. It’d be nice though one day to have a complete tutorial where we see the whole process with the person light painting the car then editing everything from scratch rather than just explaining it by turning on and off the layers.
So the only thing left to do to this carefully edited image is to apply a very strong instagram filter. jk Lovely edit, I adore the subtleness and all these nice little practices you have which are very refreshing to see.
This must be one of those tutorials that says; "If you don't know how to do "lighting painting photograpy - the equipment, the camera, the light source, the camera setting, etc, etc, etc, - don't ask! The Photoshop part - this I know. It's the photography part that is #1 - Under a controlled environment and #2 - done using highly sophisticated equipment and #3 - not explained in this video.
nice but wayyyyy tooooo much work for a basic composition… painting with studio or strobe flash leaves far more options to “paint”. You can use it 24/7 instead of only in dark areas and circomstances
I mean this is slightly more detailed and HDR looking than a single exposure but trust me Ive seen ppl that can pull off amazing single exposures. Btw editing is not an integral part of lightpainting. True lightpainters frown on editing, esp heavy editing. But thats from a purely artistic perspective. Again I know why you did it like this and for a professional shoot, you would. Im just sayin there are ppl that can get sick results off 1 shot.
@@InebriHATED I’m a little confused. You used the term “true light painters” yet admit that this is part of professional shoot. So what’s your definition of a true light painter exactly? And who are these apparent true light painters (had no idea this was even label btw) who frown upon editing? I’ve never heard that or seen that. Also, given that lighting a car, you’ll often have trails of light escaping your source which will show up in areas outside of your subject, editing in fact *is* a pretty integral part of light painting. Whether light painting, strobing, or using ambient light, it’s typically an industry standard to use multiple layers and exposures along with Photoshop to merge, mask, remove unwanted areas or to highlight key points. I’m not sure where you’re getting your information, but it is unequivocally false. Do you have examples of work from so-called true light painters that reflects what you’re claiming?
Love your tutorials Mo and this kid is definitely really talented. It’d be nice though one day to have a complete tutorial where we see the whole process with the person light painting the car then editing everything from scratch rather than just explaining it by turning on and off the layers.
Yes dom you legend
Dominykas is really talented!!
❤wow so much
Really enjoyed this tutorial. No lightstreaks on windows is key aswell
Doninic is such a legend, love his workst! This was mega insighful and inspirational!
He is indeed!
Thank's for another awesome vid Moe, much appreciated!
Very underrated video.. How region of video affets its popularity. Great video, good as a tutorial, how it's done 👍
well i think youre the best in lithuania and its nice to see that you are spreading your knowlage with more people :)
Thanks for your sharing ! Can you tell us what is your light source ?
Really great video ! leaned a lot
Brilliant work, thank you for your insights
Great to see you!
Lightpainting and lots of retouching.
Nice video. This wil really help my editing skills!
Great tutorial, thx
Excellent tutorial
wow, that's amazingg
epic work, just didn't think the magenta on the tire made sense from across the room over the car, everything else on point
Awesome 👍 thx for some new input
What an awesome tutorial/walk through - very informative indeed.
great work...is there any type of lights you'd recommend?
I have a video on my channel about my favourite kit, also have a look at ML30 by Godox - but have a look at the video first.
Awesome video! Thank you very much!!
Epic
Was cpl on when shooting this 3:59
So the only thing left to do to this carefully edited image is to apply a very strong instagram filter. jk
Lovely edit, I adore the subtleness and all these nice little practices you have which are very refreshing to see.
Me zainal, can you do lighting with photoshop tools without speed light?
This must be one of those tutorials that says; "If you don't know how to do "lighting painting photograpy - the equipment, the camera, the light source, the camera setting, etc, etc, etc, - don't ask! The Photoshop part - this I know. It's the photography part that is #1 - Under a controlled environment and #2 - done using highly sophisticated equipment and #3 - not explained in this video.
Hello Roger, thanks for the feedback, please have a look at my other light painting tutorials, you will find more details/explanations within.
@@MoeZainalThanks for the reply Moe. Will do.
nice but wayyyyy tooooo much work for a basic composition… painting with studio or strobe flash leaves far more options to “paint”. You can use it 24/7 instead of only in dark areas and circomstances
Cool shot but a real lightpainter woulda captured this in a single long exposure. No hate, just sayin👍🏻 *Editing has taken over raw talent.
Who on earth told you that?! 😂
@@dominicmann4704 exactly, I have no clue how wil you get all of this in one clean shot 😃 editing is an integral part of light painting!
Really?
I mean this is slightly more detailed and HDR looking than a single exposure but trust me Ive seen ppl that can pull off amazing single exposures. Btw editing is not an integral part of lightpainting. True lightpainters frown on editing, esp heavy editing. But thats from a purely artistic perspective. Again I know why you did it like this and for a professional shoot, you would. Im just sayin there are ppl that can get sick results off 1 shot.
@@InebriHATED I’m a little confused. You used the term “true light painters” yet admit that this is part of professional shoot. So what’s your definition of a true light painter exactly? And who are these apparent true light painters (had no idea this was even label btw) who frown upon editing? I’ve never heard that or seen that. Also, given that lighting a car, you’ll often have trails of light escaping your source which will show up in areas outside of your subject, editing in fact *is* a pretty integral part of light painting.
Whether light painting, strobing, or using ambient light, it’s typically an industry standard to use multiple layers and exposures along with Photoshop to merge, mask, remove unwanted areas or to highlight key points. I’m not sure where you’re getting your information, but it is unequivocally false.
Do you have examples of work from so-called true light painters that reflects what you’re claiming?