Tips for Outdoor Portraiture
Posted: Tue Sep 19, 2006 3:48 pm
I've been asked by a work mate to take some casual family portraits in a local park or gardens the park has some access to water and a mixture of both sunny open spaces and shade under trees.
Anyways the additional twist is that it will include 16 people, while I'm all up for challenges I'd like to be as prepared as I can be for this type of shoot, which I honestly haven't had much practice with, but between now and next month I'm going to try to get some practice in. The shooting time will be morning or more likely afternoon.
Kit wise I'll have, D70, 10-20 Sigma, 18-70DX, 50 1.4, 80-200 2.8, 1x SB-800 Edit : " Oh and two tripods as well might come in handy"
The brief is that they want atleast a few hangable shots of all of them, and then I can break them up into smaller family units and get some shots of that as well. Please feel free to bombard me with ideas and suggestions.
My first thought was a reflector or two wouldn't go astray, but like I said I'm in new photographic territory.
Anyways the additional twist is that it will include 16 people, while I'm all up for challenges I'd like to be as prepared as I can be for this type of shoot, which I honestly haven't had much practice with, but between now and next month I'm going to try to get some practice in. The shooting time will be morning or more likely afternoon.
Kit wise I'll have, D70, 10-20 Sigma, 18-70DX, 50 1.4, 80-200 2.8, 1x SB-800 Edit : " Oh and two tripods as well might come in handy"
The brief is that they want atleast a few hangable shots of all of them, and then I can break them up into smaller family units and get some shots of that as well. Please feel free to bombard me with ideas and suggestions.
My first thought was a reflector or two wouldn't go astray, but like I said I'm in new photographic territory.