Just watched this and then the 2019 patterns you suggested. You have a great teaching style: slow enough to learn, but fast enough so we don't get bored. As a new subscriber, I'm very glad to have found your channel, and look forward to watching more. TY for your content.
Learning how to see light will drastically improve your photography but is definitely a thing that can take time (or at least in my case it did) to learn, see it, adjust it to my liking, etc.
A little off topic there is that big U.K. fashion photographer on RU-vid I can't remember his name he was shooting I think a mirrorless Hasselblad and a manual lens with focus peaking. He would nail focus and then turn the lens just a little so its a tad out of focus. This is so you don't pick up all the pores.
Another awesome video and great content Ernesto, I was looking through your equipment for this shoot and couldn’t find any details about your backdrop. Do you have a link to that if you don’t mind sharing. Thanks.
Ryan Schembri Dad would say you can shoot when you see a pocket off light. I would say Cliff Mautner and Jerry Ghionis explain lighting the best for new photographers. Lighting is very simple I mean very simple but for some reason the human brain overthinks lighting. We also do this when filming video when people walking around with shaky footage. When you watch most TV or Movies they are still shots the camera is on a tripod. I tell people to watch a few TV shows they like but not comedy shows that are filmed on a set. All these shows you will see side lighting. CSI Miami I think was the best for nice lighting but not for noobs. I would say JAG is a good show to watch to start to see light they use a lot of side lighting. Kevin Mullins Fuji ambassador said he had problems seeing light. What he did was he would shoot his mirrorless cameras in black & white and he said that helped a lot. The cool thing about Fuji cameras you can shoot raw+ plus three different jpegs profiles.