The Four Seasons of the Little Egret

As an amateur bird photographer, I often asked myself what is so special in birds, and why many people are so attracted by them. The answers to these questions are not unique and likely involve subjective feelings and personal motivations. Some are simply attracted by the fact that birds are challenging and fascinating subjects. Others may enjoy spending some time outdoors in close contact with nature, regardless of the possibility of getting any shot at all. Still, others may think of birds as excellent subjects due to their behavior and plumage color.
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Returning to a Location

If you frequently return to the same location for photography, how do your photos change over time? Do you gain a better understanding of the scene in front of you? These questions have been on my mind recently as I return to old locations for various reasons.
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Mirror, Mirror….

Shooting reflections can be tough. Easy to produce flash hits, and hard to manage backgrounds. Reflections can pick up all sorts of stuff you don’t want in the photo, or are unattractive. So, caution is the word, and piece by lighting piece, carefully placed, is the production plan.

The light here is a Profoto 1×3 strip, which I would have loved to be closer to our wonderful model, Kelly, but with the camera being wide angle, it’s as close as I could manage. It’s affixed with a fabric grid and further contained by the cutter boomed just below it. Note the sandbags and the assistant’s hand on the c-stand riser. You don’t want to extend a light this far without safety measures for the model. And for yourself. The location owners told us we could use that mirror but that is was an heirloom, valued beyond measure. I did not want to find out how much that mirror cost.

There’s a faint warmish glow in the other room, a wash on the ceiling as if there’s a light up there. Without that flash, the room goes black, and lacks depth. Has to be lit, as I am working as fast a shutter as I can, given the nuclear glow from the window, camera left. (Baseline exposure here on the Nikon Z 7II is ISO 400, 16mm throw on the Nikkor 14-24 f2.8 S lens, f/5.6, at 1/50th of a second.)

Everything on a shoot like this is “What can I get away with?” It’s wide glass but you have to careful with it as if really widen you’ll bestow upon Kelly a pair of arms and legs that might make her look like she plays in the NBA. Pull the window exposure down just enough, but if you go too far, the whole bloody room will require lighting. Control the light so it does not spill, but make it big enough to be pleasing for your subject and the mood of the old house. Tether Tools played a role here, with reliable connect to my laptop, and Capture One was huge in that i could really examine the photo, and enlarge it to see if there were stray details that needed tending to.

This mirror set is, lighting-wise, the opposite of the previous set in an adjacent room, seen below.

For this, I used a big scrim overhead of camera, to give a beautiful, open glow to Kelly, who’s dressed, courtesy of Sam Brown Style, as if she just walked off the set of Bridgerton. There was also a dash of low light to account for potential shadow from the hat, perched like a bird on her head. Above and below the lens, this was just lots and lots of soft, beautiful light, without too much regard for control.

As opposed to this kind of lighting on the last set of the day. Simple beauty dish with a grid and a diffuser sock. Edge for the face, no spill on the room. This is all about control.

So, why a blog now on lighting “This Old House?” Because that’s what we’re doing this coming November with our dear friends at Nikon UK. We have two days of lighting workshops coming up, at the amazingly beautiful English country mansion, Ashridge House, in Hertfordshire. We’ll run for two days, Nov. 24th and 25th. (The 24th is sold out, 25th still has a few spots.) Booking link is here.

We’ll have multiple talented models, and access to incredible scenes in this famous mansion, whose history literally dates back to medieval times. I’ve never worked there before and I’m totally jazzed by the possibilities of this location. As I said, we’ll have wonderful models, including one of my favorite models of all time, Amber Tutton, seen below in fashion mode in downtown London.

Can’t wait to get back to the UK. Hope to see many familiar faces of photog friends there!

More tk….

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Joe McNally Photography

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ASUS ProArt PA32UCG Monitor Review

With its “ProArt” series, ASUS has been targeting the creative field with all kinds of high-quality computer parts and accessories. Its monitor line-up is quite well-known by now, with everything from beginner-level IPS displays all the way to high-end monitors for color-accurate work. Ever since I reviewed the ASUS ProArt PA278QV, I have been curious about how well the high-end ASUS monitors measure up for serious post-processing needs, so when I found out that ASUS released its newest ProArt PA32UCG monitor, I wanted to give it a shot. With its $ 5K price tag, this monitor is by no means cheap, so let’s see what it has to offer, especially when compared to its competition.
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Arca Swiss Quick Link Set Review

Arca Swiss’s “Quick Link Set” is a duo of lightweight plates that go between your tripod and your tripod head, letting you attach and detach the head quickly. I’ve been using the Quick Link Set recently and wanted to cover my impressions in today’s review.
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