I was just doing some night shots of an oversize load, and used a flashlight to frame the image, but using the iso never occurred to me, awesome tip and awesome videos. Thanks!
Northern Alberta here: we subscribe 'cuz it's CanCon, but also relevant to what we shoot - cars (after snow's gone). For us, it's a seasonal thing and your content helps us make it better. Thank you.
After I select all photos I wanna use and select "edit -> open as layers in photoshop" it says unable to open photoshop. But I can open it normally. Any idea why? Thanks
I don't have any strobes but the process would be very similar! Once you're getting a positive exposure with the light you're using, then you would stitch all the photos together exactly the same as you would in the second half of the tutorial! I would assume with a strobe that getting a remote shutter would be very helpful, most cameras have apps that you can shoot remotely with now.
iso 50 is not allways best, use lowest NATIVE iso, most of the times 100. F4 isnt the best, some lenses are just sharp right at their max, depends on prime or zoom. White balance doesnt matter shooting raw, and shooting RAW should be on night shots
Thanks for sharing your thoughts man. Hope you learned the skill of light painting regardless of the tools used or if you personally enjoy the end result. The goal is education. Have a good one ✌🏼
you are right, you have to be wearing black clothes! there's so many things that he hasn't covered because this is simply just a sponsored video to the light he used lol.. he didn't even mention the right technique to do a light painting
@@iamcrackles the video is a mess honestly he barely taught how to light paint and I have been automotive photographer for 7 years now so I watched many tutorials of it & practiced it before
Hey dudes, I appreciate the feedback. Interestingly enough it doesn't matter what you're wearing, if you are moving while you have a long shutter then you won't see yourself at all. You can see in some of the images that the light was "static" or not moving briefly. If you have any questions feel free to ask as this is a community that I love to help automotive photographers, not just trying to sell something. RU-vid definitely has a way that they prefer we make videos in order to get you guys to watch them, so sometimes we miss information in order to make it short enough that you guys will watch the whole thing. Regardless, I appreciate your guys feedback and hopefully there's a handful of things you can pull from the video and add to your set of knowledge to make better photos in the future. Cheers!