Details of the Grand Opening
Saturday is coming soon! The grand opening of our new studio will take place and we would like to tell you some details.
The whole thing starts at 3:00 p.m., then we open the doors. Throughout the day you can inspect the studio, test and try everything, talk shop together and have fun. Food and drinks will be provided. In addition, you can participate in our raffle.
The following prizes are waiting for you:
- Manfrotto Unica V Messenger Bag
- Manfrotto strobist lighting kits (Nano Light Stand & Lite-Tite)
- dm-fotobuch coupons
- lensloop.com camera straps
- DVD package Krolop&Gerst
- DVD Krolop&Gerst
- Manfrotto tripod (Compact Photo Kit)
- Manfrotto table tripod
- Manfrotto (Pocket Series) tabletop tripod
- Travel voucher
Overview of the program:
7:00 p.m. raffle deadline
8:00 p.m. raffle
9:00 p.m. catwalk of "Color me Bad", they show you their online store fashion
10:00 p.m. DJ Overflow - Partytime!
The studio is in the same building as the Gotec. To avoid problems during admission, print out this ticket and show it at the entry gate:
See you on Saturday!
Grand Opening – New Studio
We are all very busy at the moment but we wont miss to let you guys know that you can block the date for something big!
At December, 10th it's finally official, we invite you to the grand opening of our new studio!
Yesss, we got a new and bigger studio and want to show it to you!
When? December, 10th 2011 from 3 pm to open end
Where? Gablonzerstraße 11, Karlsruhe at the lightGIANTS Studio
We where lucky to get some bigger and smaller names to sponsor the event and so we want to share that with all of you. There will be a cat walk with Color Me Bad, we will raffle really giant prices form our sponsors which are Manfrotto, Lens Loop, Krolop & Gerst, Flickr, dm-digifoto, reisen-holzapfel.de and more! So stay tuned - be there!
More Details will follow, but keep that date in mind (and your calendar)
11th lightGIANTS Friday night shoot. “Zumba”
The Zumba Friday night shoot was based all around getting the timing right. Zumba instructor Nadine and "speedy" danced their hearts out , repeating steeps and move so we could capture the perfect moment.
To give the girls a rest each time we changed photographers we changed dancers. And for the second round we checked that each photographer was paired up with the other dancer. What was amazing was that they had just done a one hour Zumba calss then raced direct to the studio for a 3 hour shoot. Thanks so much for the effort you put in.
I had 2 very different lighting set-ups planed for the evening. I with a blown out what background and one a lot more colourful.
And now to finisher it all for the world famous video.
10th lightGIANTS Friday night shoot. “Glamours/GQ style”
This time the Friday night shoot theme was based around fashion magazines like GQ. To achieve this high fashion looks we had 2 models "sandra" and "lars" (Some of you my recognise Sandra from my rocker girl shoot). Speaking very generally mens' fashion mags tend to use a lot harder light source them womens' magazines. There for we limited the the lights sources to beauty dishes, large parabolic umbrellas and a ring flash.
One thing i noticed very early in the shoot is that a 2m umbrella can (that we were using as a fill flash), was putting out way to much light although it was set to minimum power. My mistake was that the silver umbrella was so large and so close to the subject, that it was acting as a reflector for the key light. After a slight bit of repositioning the problem was solved.
For a lot of the solo photos of Lars we only used a beauty dish with a honeycomb grid. That extra hard light works wonders on is chiseled cheek bones and jaw line. Maybe we should have added a hair light for a bit of separation, but at the time the results were looking good.
and if its finished in time...... the world famous making of video ![]()
9th lightGIANTS Friday night shoot. “Birds of Paradise”
Once again Lisa Futterer (http://www.hairart-lisa.de/) was back in the studio doing some of her make up magic. This time we were shooting "the Birds of Paradise". I based the lighting around quick easy set ups to get different looks quickly, and like always I had a set of lighting (with a bit of free time at the end to play with the lighting). We started with one set up and step by step changed the background lighting to create different looks.
The idea was to leave the key light and a reflector set up in the same place and only change the background lighting.
- We started with 2 flashed pointed at the background to blow the grey paper out to become almost white.
- Later turned the strobes around towards the models. This caused the background to become a lot darker (almost black) and creat a rim lightin on the models
- Then I added a 4th flash on the ground behind the models, with barn doors and colour gels we could control the colour of the back ground.
- Towards the end we changed the grey seamless paper background for curtains
Using these quick easy steeps we created 4 different looks with next to no effort or time.
It was a quick and creative way to get different looks when you are pressed for time ....
and finally the world famous video
Thanks to Daniel Neu
Black and White Photography (Part 1)
Back in the 80s, Black and White was often seen as old fashioned and uninteresting. Most developing labs could not even deal with black and white film, and had to send it away to be developed. It became the domain of those with their own darkrooms (ahhhh the good old days).
Since the digital revolution black and white has started to boom again. Black and white is a bit of a misnomer, as an image consists not just of black and white pixels, but many shades of grey in between. But who am I to go against the well established convention so I'll stick to calling it black and white (B&W for short) or monotone.
By removing colour from an image, it focuses the viewer’s attention on form and composition, and helps emphasise qualities in the image such as shape and texture. Although most cameras have a mode to shoot in black and white, it is always better to shoot in colour and convert to monochrome later. You will have more control over the conversion process, and you'll retain the option to keep the colour version as your preferred option.
The skills needed to take good black and white photos are quite different from colour, as it is often the colour that attracts your eye to a particular picture, whereas with black and white, all you have are different levels of brightness. The skill that needs to be learned is to see the world in black and white.
Converting to Black and White
There are many options available to you to convert your colour image into monochrome image. These include:
- Greyscale
- Desaturate the image
- The Channel Mixer
- Use LAB mode
- Luminosity Blending
There may be others depending on what software you use. I (Scott) haven’t had a lot of experience with LAB mode and Luminosity Blending.
Convert to Greyscale
This is the simplest way to create a black and white image from a colour photograph, it also probably produces the closest image to what the camera would have come up with if you used the black and white mode. It is often dismissed as not worth bothering with, because it is so simple. However I think that if you just starting to try monotone photography you should give it a go - you can always hit undo if you don’t like the results.
Note: This option may automatically reduce the image down to a single channel. Many image editing filters and effects require a 3 channel image to work, so you may then need to convert the image back to RGB mode (although it will remain grey as the colours have been removed).
Desaturate
Another simple method that will produce quite a different monotone image from that of the “Convert to Grayscale” option. Sometimes it can look better. It does have the advantage that it leaves the image as an RGB image, and therefore you can apply all the usual effects and filters.
The Channel Mixer
The channel mixer is probably one of the most used conversion methods. The chip in your camera is a colour device, with three primary colours that come from the sensor. A black and white image contains just one channel of information, there must be some element of “weighting” involved (i.e. how much of the red, the green and the blue should be used to make up the shade of grey).
Back at the dawn of photography when black and white was the only option, photographers used coloured filters (in front of the lens) to either increase or reduce the a particular colour (a red filter on a blue cloudy sky would exaggerate the contrast in this area in the black and white image). All that is happening is that the red filter is allowing red light through and blocking other colours. Colours that get blocked appear darker ; in this case blue is getting blocked, being at almost the total opposite of the spectrum to red and therefore very dark. This way you have more control over the conversion process, as the channel mixer acts a little like these filters.
Depending on your software you will see at least three sliders labelled red, green and blue. There will probably be a check box labelled monochrome which needs to be selected if you want the output to be a greyscale image. The values of the colours should add up to 100% if you want the resulting image to have the same average brightness as the original.
Setting the red value to 100% and green and blue values to 0% will show a bright area corresponding to the areas of red in the image. If you want to mimic the luminosity received by the human eye, you should set the values to about 30% (red), 59% (green) and 11% (blue)
Hue-Saturation Adjustment Layer
This is a very flexible way of converting your image to black and is it keeps the original colour image (on the background layer) in tact while allowing you to work with the black and white image. But requires a more in depth knowledge of the software you are working with. The effect can be very similar to the Desaturate option above, but using a Hue-Saturation Adjustment Layer offers you a similar level of control to the channel mixer. In fact, if you use two Hue-Saturation adjustment layers, you will have even more control.
Try this...
- Create two hue-saturation adjustment layers.
- On the uppermost one, set the blending mode to 'colour' and the saturation to -100.
- You can now adjust the hue slider on the lower one to select the colour filter you want to emulate, and the saturation slider in this layer to control the amount of effect the filter has.
It is worth having a playing around with and see what effects you can get.
Use LAB mode
LAB mode is just one of many colour spaces that available in Photoshop (and other packages). LAB mode is able to represent the largest range of colours possible in an image. Like RGB, it is a 3-channel colour mode. However, whereas RGB mode uses the amount of each of three primary colours, LAB uses a lightness channel and two colour channels. Therefore if you convert your image to LAB mode, and then click on the Lightness channel in the Channels Palette, you will see the black and white image. To delete the 2 colour channels now, simply change the mode to greyscale and the colour information is removed from the image. Although LAB colour is based on the human perception of colour, black and white images created in this way often appear too light to too dark. There is a technique called luminosity blending which can correct for this.
Luminosity Blending
This is one of the more complex methods of converting a colour image to black and white. It involves putting the photograph onto a layer above a plain white layer, and then changing the blend mode from 'Normal' to 'Luminosity' (called Luminance in Paint Shop Pro).
Here's a step by step approach for Photoshop users:
- Promote the background layer with your photo on to a normal layer by renaming it or double-clicking on the word 'Background' in the layers palette.
- Insert a pure white layer beneath the picture layer (any colour other than white, grey or black will add a tint to the picture)
- Set the blend mode of the picture layer to Luminosity.
Sync Speed
Shooting with flash is a bit different to shooting with out flash. The key part of determining any flash exposure is the lens’ aperture, the camera ISO, and the power out put of your flash. The exposure happens when the flash fires and your shutter needs to be open for the duration of the flash.
The duration of the flash from electronic flash units is quite short, about 1/1000th of a second or even faster is not uncommon. The exposure is made while the shutter is open, and the flash fires. Your cameras shutter speed will be slower that the flashes there for you freeze that moment in time. In short the shutter opens, the flash fires, and the shutter closes. The amount of light that get through to your chip (or film) is determined by the power of the flash and the F/ (aperture) used. Finally the ISO settings of your camera will determine how much of that light it keeps or can use.
If you are shooting at a higher shutter speed than your camera can synchronise at you will only get part of the picture. What part is missing depends on which way the shutter travels and how much you get is determined by the shutter speed you selected. If your shutter speed is set way to fast you will only get a black frame, if your sync speed is set only slightly to fast you will get a black stripe on the side of your photo. Modern DSLR cameras have maximum synchronization speed that varies with each camera so please look at your cameras hand book to find out the maximum sync speed (or X speed)
There are several different affects you can achieve by adjusting your sync speed. Lower shutter speeds allow more of the ambient light to influence overall exposure, mostly the background (because the aperture you select determines the main subject’s exposure). Using a slow shutter speed can "open up" the background allowing more ambient light to affect the exposure and show more separation between subject and background.
But be aware that the colour temperature of any artificial lights in the ambient light. Depending on how bright they may be, using slower shutter speeds can add unwanted colour that may pollute skin tones in your shot. The solution: Increase shutter speed but not too much. On the other hand, warmer light sources can add pleasant warmth to the photographs.
A faster exposure speed will generally result in a sharper image due to less movement during the exposure. It will also isolate the subject more from any back ground as less ambient light will be captured in the exposure.
solidcase competition – the winner
At the beginning of last week we started a competition supported by solidcase. Honestly we hoped for a bit more atendence but we are happy with the result and now we have our lucky winner. Which ist...
Marco Spaluto
Congratulations! We where impressed by your effort to find out the correct positions of the several lights. Let us show you how Marco figured out the mostly correct positioning of the flashes. He set up a simple remake of the setup at home and figured it out with simple lamps. Well done!
And here you can see the original setup where Marco's guess was the closest.

















































































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