Posts Tagged ‘dancesport’

White Balance for Skin Tones – Tech Thursday

©TimeLIne Media - people photo with a warmed white balance

Cool. Warm. These descriptive words for temperature is used widely in photography. From looking at other amateur photographers wanting to improve their photos, this is one of the first places I look at this time. Back in the film days, the color temperature of your images would have been built into the film and processing that was used in development of the negatives of slides. Today, however, the temperature of your photos can be set right in the camera, and changed as needed. In your camera settings, you look to the White Balance settings to set the color temp.

Post Processing

There are presets that manufacturers use to separate different light temperature. From cooler to warmer, the presets are usually Incandescent, Tungsten, Daylight, Flash, Cloudy, Shade, but the settings on yours may differ. In some cameras, there is also a “K” setting which stands for Kelvin temperature. With this setting you can finely tune the temperature by selecting the Kelvin setting of the light you are shooting. The scale will go from something in the 2500K range on the cool side, to 10000K on the warm side. Take some example photos, and you can see the changes as the temperature goes up in the frame. Skin tones are where you can see the changes the most:

White Balance Example

©TimeLIne Media - White balance for skin tones
©TimeLine Media – White balance for skin tones

The photo on the left is set to “Auto” in the White Balance setting. For me, the skin tones are too “cool” for my taste. Moreover for anyone that has ever been to a ballroom dance event knows that tanner is better for skin tones! The same is true when editing any portraits or group shots. Skin tones always look better warmer. This is an almost universal rule that I have learned in my photography. People look healthier, and more natural even if the skin tone does not exactly match the tone in real life.

The automatic settings in cameras or software may not give skin tones their best look. Comparatively, observe the variety of photos you come across on social media, or in your own collection, and see how they can magically be improved with adjusting one setting! Let me know how this works for you! Especially let me know if you have any other questions on how to set this on your own cameras or software. Although it is a quick fix in post, it can make a large difference!

©TimeLIne Media - people photo with a warmed white balance
©TimeLine Media – people photo with a warmed white balance

TimeLine Media – www.timelinedc.com
703-864-8208

Early September Canvas Sale

©TimeLine Media - dancing at the American Star Ball

Custom Wall Art

Happy September! This is a popular time for sales from the print labs as schools are getting back into session. The lab that I primarily use is having a canvas sale. From today, September 1, 2013 to next Sunday, September 8, 2013 prints are discounted. The prices have already been changed on the proofing website. With this in mind, no coupon or special codes are needed to receive the 20% off discount.

http://www.timelinedc.com/proofs

©TimeLine Media - Arthur Murray Virginia Beach at the Spring Freestyles
©TimeLine Media – Arthur Murray Virginia Beach at the Spring Freestyles

Canvas Sale

As I have noted, canvas prints have become a popular way to hang art on your walls. These prints are a more contemporary presentation of images, without frames, or borders. However, if you would like a more traditional setting, these can be placed into wood frames, or created with a color border surrounding the edges. At this time I have many of my personal prints hanging in my house this way. Mine are grouped into collections for wall spaces. I especially enjoy the reaction people have from seeing large, custom-made photographs in my home. Of course I appreciate having paintings or reprints of famous photos, but as personal as photography is to me, it is a perfect way to present my craft to family and visitors.

Example of canvas print collection
Example of canvas print collection

So much of my photography is from the ballroom dance floor. Many customers have emailed, and we have created nice groupings of canvas prints for their spaces. While some are on walls, some have them gone up staircases, others have been placed in their entertainment rooms where they practice some of their dancing. Unlike paper prints, it is much easier to hang these as larger prints – they come with rubber bumpers, and framing wire already attached so you just need to mount a picture frame hook to hang these pieces. If you have any questions about them, please let me know! I can help you measure out a good size for a space you were thinking, and can recommend images if you have a few in mind. My email is rassi @ timelinedc.com, phone 703-864-8208.

©TimeLine Media - dancing at the American Star Ball
©TimeLine Media – dancing at the American Star Ball

TimeLine Media – www.timelinedc.com
703-864-8208

Sports Photographer Idols – Part 3

©TimeLine Media - USA Dance Mid-Atlantic Champsionships - ballroom dance

In two previous posts, here and here, I wrote about lessons learned from studying another sports photographer to improve my own photography. I will be going out to another sporting event today, and will be on the look out for more inspiration. Another lesson that Dave Black will emphasize with action sports photography is gear. Yes, this aspect of photography can be really overdone! In the competitive world of sports photography, it can be determining factor in whether you can survive shooting only sports.

Photography Kit

If the people around you are shooting at 200mm, you need to get a 300mm length lens. Comparatively if everyone is shooting at 400mm length, you need to get a 600mm length lens. If everyone has an 800mm lens, you need to stick a teleconverter on your lens to extend passed 800mm. Moreover if this sounds like an incredibly expensive “arms race”, it is. But it is hard to argue in an age where everyone has access to good camera bodies, and long lenses – where iPhone and tablet photos can pass as publishable images for newspapers and websites. Photographers also need to up their game in terms of equipment, and putting that equipment in places where everyone else does not have access.

©TimeLine Media - ballroom dancing at the 2013 American Star Ball
©TimeLine Media – ballroom dancing at the 2013 American Star Ball
©TimeLine Media - Baltimore Dancesport Challenge
©TimeLine Media – Baltimore Dancesport Challenge

The last point that stuck with me from Dave, is positioning of the photographer with relationship to his subjects. When shooting sports, it is important to get down low to the ground. The subject you are aiming for, if they are down the field, will look like they are right in your plane of view. And when they start to move towards you, then will look larger and fill up the frame making for an “hero” shot composition. Viewers will be drawn to the main subject. They will look powerful and dominate the frame which is the goal in most action images – even from the dance floor!

Sports Photographer

The sports photographer will be on the ground with knee pads or stretched out just off the edge of the dance floor trying to get the camera to places that people in the audience or in the stands would not be able to get their camera. This is their job, and why they are given the task and position in the venue. If they do not take advantage of their setting, then smartphone and tablet images will become more acceptable. And exceptional sports imagery will no longer be sought after by editors, and customers.

©TimeLine Media - Arthur Murray Summer Showcase
©TimeLine Media – Arthur Murray Summer Showcase
©TimeLine Media - USA Dance Mid-Atlantic Champsionships - ballroom dance
©TimeLine Media – USA Dance Mid-Atlantic Champsionships – ballroom dance

TimeLine Media – www.timelinedc.com
703-864-8208

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