Wedding And Portraiture Take Control Of Your Background
Monte Zucker, August, 2001

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Photos © 2001, Monte Zucker, All Rights Reserved |
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It may surprise you that
many people taking pictures today are quite shocked when they see the
results of their efforts. "That isn’t what I saw when I took the
picture!" they say. Or worse: "How did this happen?"
These are only a couple of
the comments that I hear frequently from photographers who haven’t quite
grasped onto the idea that they have the ability to control the detail
in backgrounds. They just have to understand their own responsibility
in achieving the final results.
This was brought sharply
to my attention recently when I photographed a neighbor’s visiting children
and grandchildren a few minutes before they went out. I wanted to show
them in the Florida environment, yet still wanted the people to stand
out in the pictures more than the background. The choice of location
was simple. I would photograph them in the screened-in lanai area behind
their home.
At the same time, I had to
consider the lighting on their faces. I chose my first location considering
(first) an appropriate background and (second) good, natural lighting
on the subjects’ faces. My decision was to position the family so that
the light would be coming from behind them and from the side. That would
tend to create depth, texture, and detail. At the same time, everyone
would be looking toward a dark area. That would mean that there would
be no squinting of the eyes from the bright morning sun.
There had been no prior discussion
of clothing. They were all dressed to go out for Sunday brunch. The
only thing that I changed was to have the two men take off their navy
blue sport jackets. They were simply "out-of-key" with the light colors
that everyone else was wearing. I explained the situation to them. No
problem. The jackets came off and everyone seemed to blend together
much better for the picture.
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Exposure Considerations
I pointed my Canon D30 camera toward the shaded area and read the exposure.
I then set the camera manually for that exposure. I figured that this
would be similar to the amount of light that would be on their faces.
I didn’t want the camera to read the bright background and underexpose
the people. My first test showed that I could open the lens an additional
f/stop to get the detail I wanted in the faces. It was that simple.
I explained to everyone before
I took the picture that I was going to record great detail in the people,
while creating a background that would be so light it would be almost
nonexistent. This would focus the attention directly onto the family.
At the same time, however, you would still get the feeling of the Florida
location.
Two armchairs that were already
there had to be moved only slightly to pose the group exactly where I
wanted them. I began the arrangement by having the finished composition
in mind before I even began to seat them. First, I sat the parents, placing
the grandparents in the center of the picture. I then added the boys on
each side, placing the youngest of the children front and center. I roughly
composed the group through the viewfinder of my 28-135mm Canon zoom lens
until I liked the space around them.
I finally started the refinement
of the group by posing each of their feet. Then, I did the last minute
"touch-ups" by connecting them all with their hands and arms. (You can
usually tell my family groups by the way I have each of the family members
reaching out to each other.) Expressions were up for grabs, especially
with the youngest.
A stranger in their midst,
and they were expected to smile? Well, we’d see. I actually ended
up trying to get everyone’s attention by balancing things on my
head. The boys thought I looked stupid. The little girl seemed quizzical,
but the adults smiled and looked good. My main problem was to keep the
adults looking at the camera and not at the children to see how they were
reacting. Been there. Seen that, huh?
I made a test shot with a slight
adjustment in exposure. I showed it to them and we were off and running
(#1).
How about a picture (#2) of
just the five of them? Okay. Let’s see what we can do. By this time my
balancing act had worn thin, but there was no delay, since the exposure
was the same and the composition fell together pretty quickly. I used
the simple, natural light. Al-though they were basically backlit, there
was definitely bright light coming around on both sides of the group.
It just doesn’t get any easier than this, I thought.
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The "Sunny 16" Rule Works
Again!
The whole sitting had taken place in, maybe, 10 minutes or so. But before
I left I thought that it might be fun to get at least a few pictures showing
the background a little more. Since my Canon D30 digital camera was still
fairly new to me, I still wasn’t convinced that the camera could read
my thoughts/plans. I had planned to backlight them with bright sunshine,
expose for the background and then bring the light up on their faces to
match the background with the Canon 550EX flash that I was going to mount
on top of my camera.
I set the camera manually to
1/125 at f/16--my normal exposure for bright, sunny locations--and pulled
two pool armchairs to the location I had chosen. Again, I began by seating
the parents, adding the grandparents in the center and then bringing the
children into the composition. Bodies were turned toward the camera. I
had everyone sitting up straight and leaning slightly toward my camera.
Hands and arms, of course, were all positioned very deliberately to achieve
a unified family feeling in picture (#3).
Squinting now became a problem.
Although everyone was turned away from the direct sunlight, the light
bouncing off the bright setting all around them made it difficult for
them to open their eyes. As the older boy suggested, I counted to "three."
Most of them were able to open their eyes and smile on the final count…but
not the young boy to my left. Oh well, at least the exposure was perfect.
I liked the picture, even though there were still some hot spots on a
few of the faces from the sun (which was almost directly overhead).
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Out-Think The Camera? Not
Me!
It really doesn’t pay to think that you can outguess this camera. When
you put the dedicated flash into the shoe on top of the camera, the D30
thinks faster and more accurately than I can. Next, I tried adding a flash
to the picture. I wasn’t quite sure how to set the flash, so I just turned
it on and hoped for the best.
No problem. It was a beautiful
balance of sunlight and flash. What I didn’t find out until later when
David Carlson, the regional Canon rep explained it to me, was that the
flash works together with the Canon D30. Together, they automatically
go into what is called the ETTL mode. That stands for "Evaluated Through
The Lens." The built-in exposure system reads the light on the subjects
and the light on the background and puts in exactly the amount of flash
you need to accomplish the perfect balance. Of course, you can override
the flash if you want to, but why fight city hall if it works right from
the get-go as in #4?
Notice that when the light
on their faces is built up by the addition of the flash to the ambient
light, the background goes a little deeper. That’s why you need to have
a bright background to begin with. Had we been shooting into dark trees,
the background would have gone too dark. As it was, everything (except
the one kid’s squinting eyes) was perfect. At least I gave them the opportunity
to select from one or the other types of backgrounds.
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Balance The Light
"Before we finish, how about a picture of just me and my wife together?"
"Sure. Why not?"
By this time they were pushing
me to leave the house. They didn’t want to be late for their plans for
the day. Again, no problem.
I knew that if I could pose
them in a location where I would have the same amount of light on the
background as I had on their faces that it would be a slam-dunk. And it
was.
I sat her in a chair, posed
her husband on the arm and leaned them together, his head slightly higher
than hers. A couple of quick exposures and they were off as in #5.
I knew when I took the picture
that I would have to remove the brass door handles behind him. Perhaps,
even remove a wall hanging behind her. Hey, in Photoshop, it’s a matter
of just a few minutes. The simple background was all that I wanted and
just what I got.
As a matter of fact, the simplicity
of the whole family sitting was just what I wanted. I controlled the background.
I controlled the foreground. The only thing that I really couldn’t control
was the adults. They still kept looking to see how the kids were doing.
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How’d We Do?
In review, let’s take another look at exactly what happened. In the first
situation I exposed for the faces in shade and let the sunny background
go completely overexposed. The people stood out. The background was almost
nonexistent.
In the second location the
background was brightly lit by direct sunshine. I exposed for the bright
background and let the camera automatically do its thing on the faces.
Without the automatic feature of the camera, the faces would have still
fairly well matched the exposure of the background, since the area reflected
so much light back into their faces.
With the flash added, the balance
was even nicer. The people jump out beautifully in the picture, the background
goes just a little bit deeper.
In the final phase of the portrait
session I posed the couple where their faces and the background were receiving
the same amount of light. Result: perfect detail throughout the entire
image. This taught me that I could just about control the brightness of
the background in all my pictures. As long as I printed for the faces,
I could always know what was going to happen behind them. No guesses.
No surprises.
And The Result Is…
Funny, but as I was writing this article for publication I volunteered
to photograph another neighbor’s visiting children. They hadn’t planned
to do another family photograph, since I had just photographed them together
a few months ago. But I persisted and they, of course, loved the idea
of another family photograph.
Their only problem was that
they hadn’t thought in advance to bring matching clothing for them all.
"No problem!" I told them. "Let’s do a pool portrait!"
So, even though the outside
temperature was in the low 70s, they all agreed to lower themselves into
the pool just long enough for me to take a picture as shown in #6. No
clothes to worry about, so it was easy in that department.
Exposure was easy, too, of
course. I set the camera in its fully automatic mode, attached the flash
on top and simply let the camera do its thing.
Hey, it really doesn’t get
any easier than that. What a great memory of their visit to Grandma and
Grand-pa’s house.
Finally, be sure to check out
my web site at: www.zuga.net
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