This weeks video is sponsored by Fujifilm and Lymti Fujifilm fujifilm-x.com/en-gb/ Lymti Official Website Link: bit.ly/3VLGTg2 (10% discount with the code: TinHouseStudioUK) Amazon Exclusive Discount Link: bit.ly/3BC8klm (Limited offer: 20% discount)
Incredibly interesting to hear about the changes to portraiture,wonder if it will change back at some point.Thanks for this, I will have to digest this information and decide for myself.
Scott, I really enjoyed this. Amazing how similar the stories are of people who stumble on a thing and run with it… fate and the right person to make something out of “it”.
Scott, the iPhone 16 Pro has a 26mm f1.6 47Mpix FF eq for the main camera; as per Apple website. then a 12Mpix 52mm f1.6 (2x tele photo they call it) and a 12Mpix 13mm ultra wide. The iPhone Pro allows to shoot in RAW, this is the main difference with the non-pro. Almost all android phones allow to shoot RAW as it is a more open platform.
The rule for headshots…they are none. We used everything from 50mm to 200mm to create corporate headshots. Occasionally, someone will ask for a wider lens…I would deliver decent results although very very specific facial characteristics will come out visually pleasing.
I’ve always heard 28mm equivalent for the iPhone's main camera (in smartphone reviews and reviews of the Leica Q3). But I haven’t ran the numbers to verify it.
Probably depends on the exact smartphone model too. I found a stackexchange post saying (speaking about FF-equivalent focal lengths): “A recent iPhone X offers an equivalent-to-28mm lens and an equivalent-to-52mm lens, the Samsung Galaxy S9+ offers 26/52mm, the OnePlus 6 offers 25mm, the Huawei P20 offers 27mm/80mm, the Nokia 6.1 offers 27mm, …” So 26-28mm seems to be the de facto standard. Which explains why people are now used to seeing their face shot up close with a 28mm, and find it strange to see their portrait shot with a 85mm, or even a 50mm. Or, in other words, if you want to reproduce the selfie look in order to get results that feel “natural” to people most used to selfies, you need to shoot people with the camera's at arm's length from their face (or not much further than that).
This weeks video is sponsored by Fujifilm and Lymti
Fujifilm fujifilm-x.com/en-gb/
Lymti Official Website Link: bit.ly/3VLGTg2 (10% discount with the code: TinHouseStudioUK)
Amazon Exclusive Discount Link: bit.ly/3BC8klm (Limited offer: 20% discount)
Incredibly interesting to hear about the changes to portraiture,wonder if it will change back at some point.Thanks for this, I will have to digest this information and decide for myself.
What a great idea, good interview.
Scott, I really enjoyed this. Amazing how similar the stories are of people who stumble on a thing and run with it… fate and the right person to make something out of “it”.
Need to make chapters in such a long video
They take a while to appear
Scott, the iPhone 16 Pro has a 26mm f1.6 47Mpix FF eq for the main camera; as per Apple website. then a 12Mpix 52mm f1.6 (2x tele photo they call it) and a 12Mpix 13mm ultra wide. The iPhone Pro allows to shoot in RAW, this is the main difference with the non-pro. Almost all android phones allow to shoot RAW as it is a more open platform.
This was a great chat, entertaining and informative. Thanks Scott and Tim, inspiring stuff.
Glad you enjoyed it
The rule for headshots…they are none. We used everything from 50mm to 200mm to create corporate headshots. Occasionally, someone will ask for a wider lens…I would deliver decent results although very very specific facial characteristics will come out visually pleasing.
Thank you gents; fascinating discussion.
glad you enjoyed it.
The iphone focal lenght are 24mm by the main camera. 13mm and 120mm by the other cameras.
amazing thanks
I’ve always heard 28mm equivalent for the iPhone's main camera (in smartphone reviews and reviews of the Leica Q3). But I haven’t ran the numbers to verify it.
Probably depends on the exact smartphone model too. I found a stackexchange post saying (speaking about FF-equivalent focal lengths): “A recent iPhone X offers an equivalent-to-28mm lens and an equivalent-to-52mm lens, the Samsung Galaxy S9+ offers 26/52mm, the OnePlus 6 offers 25mm, the Huawei P20 offers 27mm/80mm, the Nokia 6.1 offers 27mm, …”
So 26-28mm seems to be the de facto standard. Which explains why people are now used to seeing their face shot up close with a 28mm, and find it strange to see their portrait shot with a 85mm, or even a 50mm.
Or, in other words, if you want to reproduce the selfie look in order to get results that feel “natural” to people most used to selfies, you need to shoot people with the camera's at arm's length from their face (or not much further than that).
Damn! I love this guy, his story is so....similar to mine :D
It’s amazing how many paths there are into the same career
suggestion @21:55:
next time start with the _least_ populous State.
Just fucking sick. (It's a vibe for anyone under 40)
Is it only me but the sound is hacking and half of the sound is disappearing?
Seems ok our end, might just be because its in premier state atm and lower quality
Watched it as a "standard" video, i.e. not a premiere, and the sound is all right throughout the entire video
Good to know