Exploring and Replicating Natural Light Series: "Shade to Light"
In this video, I pick up from where I left off from a while ago when I explored different forms of natural light and tried to replicate that light with artificial light in my home studio. This time, I'll be exploring "shade to light" or "shooting from the shadows" and will present some photos that I've shot in the past that incorporated this concept.
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0:00 - Picking up from where I left off...
0:41 - Defining "Shade to Light"
1:12 - Visual examples and a question
2:14 - Two main reasons
2:32 - Depth and Structure
3:49 - Guiding the eye
5:45 - Why is ANY of this important?
6:30 - How can this apply to food and still life photography?
6:52 - Simple demo shoot
7:59 - Examples from my own food photography
10:11 - Wait...do you mean to tell us....?
10:38 - Final Thoughts & Conclusion
Tools I generally use:
Saw horses: (Amazon) geni.us/n3Bz
White plexiglass: (Amazon) geni.us/U6TPMnW
DIY Food Photography Surfaces: @Hijabs and Aprons
White tri-fold fill card: (Amazon) geni.us/pXMxxd
C-stand: (Amazon) geni.us/egIGW9
Camera Mount Adapter for C-Stand: (Amazon) geni.us/rojAA
Large V-flat: (Amazon) geni.us/JbRQ
Diffusion roll: (Amazon) geni.us/thaq
Godox Sl-60W: (Amazon) geni.us/BRbinR
Tripod: (Amazon) geni.us/wkzmA
Phone clamp: (Amazon) geni.us/WfXl
Godox stripbox: (Amazon) geni.us/HiqSLdI
Music I use for KZread videos: bit.ly/2TEza2Y
Microphone I use for my videos: (Amazon) geni.us/d4Gc
Main Continuous Light: (Amazon) geni.us/Bcsf
Пікірлер: 108
I don't do food photography regularly. But your lighting insights help in my tech product videos a lot!! Thank you!!
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
That’s awesome , thanks for watching!
This overall approach has been KEY in my food/product photography looking *so much* more compelling than when I started out. Great analysis, Brandon!! I appreciate you going a step further than other educators and sharing your observations, research, and analysis with us so that we understand the "why" 🙏🏼
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Leena! I really appreciate it 🙏
Hi Brandon. I've been lucky enough to have taught photography and lighting for nearly two decades and you do such a beautiful job of elucidating these concepts. Not just because you're good on camera but you have the depth of understanding to carry it through. Great work.
i clicked so fast! Your thumbnails always make me want to grab my camera and shoot kitchen ingredients 😊. Looking foward to the weekend to put what i learnt from this into practice.
Really happy to have you back. I just want to point out that your voice is so soothing and calm that it reflects in your pictures as well. Very nice observations emphasizing the importance of backlight. Thank you for creating such insightful videos🙂
As always, this channel is a treasure!
Your video content is always the best. Ever since I started watching your videos it made my photos look better. Thanks for coming back 🙂
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
That’s awesome, thank you!
Thanks for being here again! Stay safe and have a good one!
I almost never leave any comments on KZread, but your videos are so good! Glad you are back, keep going!
Yay!!!! I’m so glad you are back!!
Glad to see you back with new and improved videos! looking forward to more
So good to see a video from you after a long time. As always thought provoking and useful information. Thank you and welcome back :).
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Pradeep!
this is super insightful. i love how you explain WHY we do things and not just HOW.
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge in depth and explaining in a way that’s very easy to understand! You’re not just a great photographer but an amazing teacher too! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Your channel is pure gold! Mate!
Brandon, I really enjoy your presentation style, so thorough and engaging. You make me feel like I can do anything.
This video is gem. Period. Thanks man for amazing content.
thanks for being so in depth ( pun unintended) and informative. Love ur vids
I'm so glad that you're back!
Thank you Brennan. Well explained and super great to learn.
LOVE THIS VIDEO! (really useful to instill the concept and idea with examples of how its created using studio lighting setups for the shot)
I’m a portrait photographer but I’m going to experiment with this in my next shoot. Thanks for all of the great content!
I dont do food photography but i love watching your tutorial. Thank you for sharing. Keep em coming!
Omg you're alive, i'm so happy!!
Your videos are AMAZING 🙌🏼 Watch every one of the the moment I see they are up 😊 Definitely more like these, please 🙏🏻
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Susanne!
@SusanneGeert
3 жыл бұрын
@@figandlight I meant videos, of course - don't know why it changed to vines 😅 Changed it now;-)
This was so good. Every video is a game changer.
best photo/lighting youtube channel, my top favourite
It’s about volumetric light too. In those shots where you have steam, actually in almost all examples from the movies, they aquire volumetric light. Which give depth to te shot, as you said. But to obtain volumetric light, the air most be not “clean”. Dust, steam, smoke, artifical smoke.
you are the best bro there are super serious lessons to learn from.
Just what I needed!! Thank you ♥️
Your teaching methods are first class, Brendon; I've learned so much from your videos. Thank you
@figandlight
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Christine! Appreciate that
Gold!!! Lucky we are as subscribers. 🤘🏼
great insights! very much appreciated! thanks for this video! 👍
Loved the video! You really inspire me to change my current setup😜 Also so glad you used the painting reference 😍
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Saipoornima! hope all is well
Welcome back! 🙏🏻
learned a lot from this . . . lookimg forward to moreof it soon
I’ve been waiting for the follow up of this series
Nothing but SOLID info - every time.
Omg the pasta shots at 9:40! 🤩
Great video ,as always. Thanx for sharing.
Awesome video! your content is the best! Thank you so so much!
Great stuff as always
this is so helpful, thank you so much
Super insightful 😻😻😻
Love your content, normally i dont like slow, and too detail infomation video. But somehow i enjoy yours. Amazing!
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
thank you!
Love the video!! But would argue about the better picture with a strawberry smoothie. The pic on the left looks better just because usually we drink smoothies in the morning and since the pic on the left looks like it was shot in the rainy (or cold winter morning) it looks better (just my modest opinion as an ex-marketing manager 😊)
Amazing!! Love the way you explain this subject!!
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Miguel! Hope all is well
Yey more vids!! :)
I always love all of your videos. You presents it with the simple way... ❤ from Indonesia....
I didn’t skip ads to support this.
Yyeeaahh !! Thank you very much thid video is very interested and educational
Thank you so much. Very helpeful!
that is amazing, would never have seen that if you have not explained it. Thank you
Beautifully explained 👍🏻
Amazing content - thank you so much
Amazing! This is a realy, realy important thing for me 😀
Thx for sharing ur knowledge 🙏 #Big appreciate 👍👍👍
Brandon is officially the 🐐
Thanks for the video - I love it when the presenter asks "why?" and gives a good answer. I think it is sometimes overlooked in tutorials. One question I have: how can I reconcile this advice with the need to not blowout the highlights when facing the light source?
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
I think there are a number ways you can do this. I typically use a polarizing filter, otherwise I would just expose for the backlight and then add fill light to the front to even put the exposure.
LOVE IIIIIIIT!
Hi Brandon, thank you for the amazing content! I sell pottery and other kitchen products and your videos are helping me take better photos for my social media accounts and website. I currently have a single Godox SL60W which I setup with a 120cm octagonal softbox side lighting my subject with a white reflector on the other side. My backdrop is 1 meter wide, and I place my softbox and reflector right by its edges. I have been struggling with light fall-off across my scene, my backdrop and background get significantly darker from one side of the frame to the other. I think the fall-off makes my image look a little “fake”. I’m trying to go for the indirect/window lit look and from what I can observe these types of images tend to be evenly lit across the scene (in the direction of the light source). Setting up my light to a 45-degree angle somewhat helps but I think I lose a bit of the window lit look with the shorter shadows. I imagine this kind of issue if hard to describe without seeing the actual photos, but any tip or comment might go a long way.
Wonderful Video!
great vid!
Love your channel.❤😊
Thank you brother 🙏🏻
Thank You!
Cinematic principle. Shoot shadow side and into the light. The eye will be attracted to in order: Human faces Highest contrast Highest saturation Brightness. Web design uses these same principles for design hierarchy. This has been studied with people having their eye movements recorded as they look at a series of different images.
Thank you❤️❤️
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
The best!
Wonderful
wooooow i like it thank u😍
Saya belajar banyak dari bapak 👍👍
Great video. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Carrie!
wow great
You are a genius !
Great video, but i have a question, backlight create a lot of glare on a drink or what ever on a steak meat, so the question is what do you do? Do you use polarization filter or somehow you have some technic to avoid glare without using polarizer
@JSMedia38
3 жыл бұрын
If you're getting glare, you can angle the camera so that the lens doesn't catch as much light from the source, you can also use a lens hood. You can also change the position or angle of the light if possible. A polarizer can help but it's not always going to be enough.
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
👆 🙌
nice advice for me
Nice video as ever..always learn something,,cud u pls suggest some good book on lighting...thnx
subscribed! very good content
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Great
such a helpful info for very newbie here, but can anyone tell me what to type the name of the diffuser (white paper roll) and flag (black board thingy) or where i can buy it? thank you before, sorry if this dum dum question hehe
@figandlight
3 жыл бұрын
no worries! the roll is from a company called Rosco. they’re pretty expensive and I wouldn’t recommend it if you’re just starting out. A simple 5 in 1 reflector from Amazon should do just fine. The board I got from Amazon as well. It’s from a brand called Elmer’s
Do we have to turn on room lights when using natural sun light or diffused light?
At the very least, this view inspired me to open up my kitchen window, clear my dinning table from all the clutter on it, layout a flat white cardboard, put a couple of apples 🍎 on a bowl, and take a few shots. There are certain mysteries in life that I will never understand, lighting and women, I don’t know how to conquer neither of them, but am alive, I still exist, so the least I could do is to continue to try, thank Jesus for digital photography so I don’t have to waste so much money on film shooting horrible photographs. I think there are two type of people on earth, #1, the ones that are blessed, everything their do or touch comes out right, so it doesn’t matter what type of lighting it is, the image will look fabulous. Then there are type #2. The ones that struggles. We are the ones that don’t have it, we have to try and try until we stumble into one little niche that we can do well, find the one woman that likes us, and then we just better stay there and preserve that, we have to concentrate on developing that one niche and don’t wonder too far. This is when back lighting might be the one niche that could help spring up some of us into a style that works so that we can fake it and act like we made it. I remember back in 1999 when I first heard of digital cameras, there was a photography using a 960 Pixel Sony camera, not even 1 MP, and it was amazing how he was able to use the lacking of that camera and turn it into art, he would mostly shot BW because the camera didn’t have white balance settings and could never get the colors right, so he didn’t even bother. Today, I find myself with a 20MP mirror less camera, that has amazing white balance, all kinds of different lens, and I can’t even start to image to create images like that photographer was producing with that very first iteration of the Sony digital camera journey. For a while Sony fade away when Canon and Nikon took over the digital realm with their DSLR, but am glad to see Sony back on the horse with the whole compact mirrorless cameras. These days I find myself spending too much time watching KZread tutorials and not pressing the shutter button enough, it is just more enjoyable to see someone produce beautiful photos, than me struggling to get one shot that is half way decent. But, your videos do give me some motivation and inspiration to keep trying, I am still here, so why not.
It's is very helpful to me specially for cooking videos but I have android
Can u make one video on how to shoot fine jewelry?
But what do we do in sunlight directly coming to lens.
"ah see what I did there" 😂😂😂
Привет, скинь фирму стола, очень классный.
hey your video content is A+ its amazing but its getting boring after some point