I really like your teaching style - very clear and succinct (not a lot of "rambling" like many of these videos on RU-vid lol). Thank you for actually displaying the number of stops you use on the screen (as opposed to just verbalizing it). Also, the sliding of the bracketing (around 5:36) was also very helpful. Keep up the great work!
The best and most clear tutorial i see on youtube so far thanks a lot, now a question, whats are your settings for the 0 point ? I mean the middle pic from all three. It should match your eyes vision ? Any tîps on Fstop and other camera settings ?
Some people are using flash to light up a room in different spots? and i was wondering if the use the same exposure with flash, but how do they get a bracketed shot if they are taking there time to move around the room?
They achieve this by having a remote controller for the shutter. So they don’t have to actually be next to the camera, instead they just walk around pressing a button wirelessly. Since the camera never moves, all the different photos can be blended. (And the person holding the flash can be removed in photoshop)
Hi, I see that they walk around with a flash and point it to different parts of the room.what I don't understand is why they blow out the area which they take photos of. I don't understand how to blend the blown out highlights in photoshop? I hope you make a video of that some day.
You should ALWAYS use flash for interior Real Estate photography as its the only proper way to achieve 100% color accuracy which is extremely important when representing a property to potential clients/buyers. CHARGE MORE! My market is saturated with these types of cheap-outsourcing photogs, driving the market down for real professionals, while delivering 'meh' quality images to agents. They're everywhere. I shoot less and make more money by shooting professionally. I'm not running around all day, shooting 4-6 houses and shipping out color-casted, blown-out images to clients. I would be embarrassed. It's sad to see how many people aren't. I'm now careful who I shoot for, and refuse service requests all the time for agents looking for a cheap/fast way out. I stand out from all the competition in my market because I took the time to study, practice and incorporate proper interior photography techniques into my business model. I educate my clients now and tell them what to look out for. They appreciate it and understand it's worth it, to spend the extra little bit. I'm trying to help change my market and bring back work for the real professionals, not RU-vid pro's. Now, HDR does have it's place (large spaces & exteriors) but I'd love to see your 'Masterclass' on Flash/Ambient interior techniques/compositing - or do you have any RU-vid videos on this or a portfolio on social media I can look through perhaps?
Not 100% sure but I think my canon bracketing feature only allows me to bracket -2 0 +2. I don’t think it allows me to do -3 0 +3 in the case of a blown out underexposed picture should I j alter my shutter speed to get proper outside exposure? I feel that’s the only thing I can do
You may save time on upload with only three shots but you end up spending too much time adjusting your settings every time the shots aren't quite what you want if you are only using three. Take five shots each time and no adjustments required. Bring them into post, pick your shots from the five and blend.
Shooting with three shots doesn't need adjusting very often and if it does, it only takes 2 or 3 seconds. I recommend using 3 but you can use 5 if you like.