Luck of the Irish.

Luck is probability taken personally. There is much thought gathered around the concept of a “lucky shot” and the volume of work that it takes to produce one. Photographers tend to look at another’s work along the lines of “If I were in that light, with that lens, I could have got the same shot”. Do it. Surround your shoot with beauty and light it to the best of your ability, and your making your own luck.

Davood_LuckFor this shoot I went back to an older technique of mine with a slight twist. My lighting of choice a year or so ago was a bare speedlight on a coiled flash cord. My umbrella being broken made me resort back to this nunchuck like setup but this time using a cheap cactus radio trigger to fire the flash. Keep in mind these aren’t capable of high speed sync, so I closed the aperture down to f16.0 (giving me just enough light for the background objects and the hair light) and then pierced through that darkness with flash in hand to the right.

The post processing to compliment this ambient/speedlight balance is also key to me. When in Raw conversion, pump the fill light to the right just until you see some noise in your shadows, then back it down a smidge. Compensate for the washout with a hefty tug on the blacks slider and then finish with a heaping spoonful of clarity. To get even crisper details mix up some sharpening paint. This can be done by cloning a copy of your master layer and applying approximately a 35 pixel high pass filter (under “other” in filters) and setting its blend mode to overlay . Then mask to hide it all and come back in to brush it where it need be. Viola! Sharpening Paint.

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One Response to “Luck of the Irish.”

  1. As I said before Davood, I really like this photo. It is almost like a cartoon in a way (a good way of course!). Thanks so much for sharing how you got this shot and also how you edited. It is nice to kind of know what happened behind the scenes. Thanks for sharing!

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