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Street style event shooting, my approach

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    Street style event shooting, my approach

    I have been asked on a number of occasions how I shoot folk at events like 1940's Weekends -as in this thread



    So I thought I'd do a brief summary of how I tackle such situations.
    I've been shooting these kind of events for a few years now, and developed an approach that works for me, there are plenty of experienced togs on the forum that may have different, but just as valid ways of shooting similar events.

    Equipment

    Keeping it Simple is probably the most important aspect, therefore I take one camera body (1Ds MKIII) and 2 lenses (135mm F2 & 85mm F1.2) and I spend half the day with one lens, and swap it for the other lens for the other half. No specific reason for this apart from slight variation it gives me. If I had to take just one lens (on a FF body) it would be 135mm F2, mainly because it auto focusses at lightning speed compared to 85 mm. If I was to take a 1.6 crop body, then it would be a 50mm lens I would take. I've used zooms in the past, but am a lot more comfortable with primes, mainly because they are a 'faster' lens, when it comes to this type of shooting, is so important, which I'll go into detail more in settings. I avoid long lenses also, I find 135mm (on a FF body) probably the max length and still be able to keep in communicating distance with the subject. Similarly, wide lenses I've used in the past, but because it's difficult to control the backgrounds, I find them less than satisfactory, but then my main aim is to shoot people either individually, in pairs or small groups.

    The only other bit of kit I take is a flash, (580EX), and it's permanently on the camera throughout the day, with a stofen diffuser in place.

    Camera Settings

    Because of the nature of the event, you don't have time to mess about with constantly changing settings, therefore I set my camera to aperture priority, ISO to 200, and I shoot all day at these settings, the only variable is aperture, which I can quickly tweak via the top scroll wheel. I shoot at ISO 200 mainly because I can totally forget about shutter speeds, knowing that the speeds will always be fast enough not to worry about.

    I always use 'fill flash' , set at ETTL, high speed sync so I can shoot at fast shutter speeds. As it is fill flash, I dial in -2/3 stop on the flash, and dial in -1/3 to -2/3 stop on the camera, I may tweak these settings depending on light and can usually feel my way to what gives the best exposure balance between natural light and flash.
    Onto why I feel a 'fast' lens is so important, unlike a controlled situation like studio, there are always lots of folk at these kind of events, therefore backgrounds can be busy, messy and unwanted, using a fast lens allows you to kick these distractions out of focus, leaving the subject nice and sharp, 95% of my shots at these events are taken between F2.2 and F3.5. The danger in using such narrow apertures is getting parts of the subject out of focus, particularly the eyes if the subject's face is at an angle, that's why I have my camera settings as described, meaning I can quickly adjust the aperture to compensate by scrolling the top dial.

    Light

    I never ever shoot in bright sunlight, preferring slightly overcast cloud, and if I can't avoid sunlight, I'll look for shaded areas to shoot. This way I avoid harsh shadows and squinting that bright sunlight inevitably means.
    Again, because it's not a controlled situation and you can't move your subject into ideal natural light, using fill flash gives a little more control over light , particularly bouncing a little more light around the face shadows.

    Subjects

    One of the attractions of these kind of events, is that most subjects 'expect' to be photographed,therefore it's not difficult getting the subject to cooperate. I always ask before I take an individual shot, and show the subject(s) the shot on the cameras LCD screen, and if they ask if they can see the shot on-line, I give them a card with my website address, and suggest they drop me an E-mail and I'll provide them with a large enough jpg image that's suitable for printing.
    It is vitally important to work fast with subjects, they don't want to be hanging around ages while you fiddle with camera settings, partly because I feel it impolite, and secondly because if they are waiting around too long, their facial expressions become strained, with fixed smiles.
    These type of events produce a wide range of interesting subjects, for me the ladies are more interesting than the fellers, mainly because they seem to spend a lot more time and effort getting the look, style and appearance right. In respect of the blokes, there seems to be a lot of accountants from Halifax with black stripe facial slap, don a Para uniform, bit of camouflaged webbing and try to look macho, windswept and interesting for a day, which somehow doesn't appeal.

    Post Processing

    Very little, usually crop, tweak the levels, USM. I find if you can get the exposure balance right (natural light/flash) in camera, then there is usually no need for much adjustment. I know there is a certain trend to process these kind of shots in a 'vintage' way, usually sepia, or desaturated colours, vingetting , adding grain, but it's not for me.

    These events are great fun, there is generally a carnival atmosphere , it's a photographers playground, so if you have never attended, go along to one, you won't be disappointed.
    Concentrate on equipment and you'll take technically good photographs. Concentrate on seeing the light's magic colours and your images will stir the soul. - Jack Dykinga
    Light makes photography. Embrace light. Admire it. Love it. But above all, know light. Know it for all you are worth, and you will know the key to photography- George Eastman

    #2
    Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

    This is a great tutorial Les. Thanks so much for your time and explanations. A definite bookmark on this one!

    Thanks again,

    Garry
    Garry Macdonald on Flickr
    Garry Macdonald on Facebook

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

      Excellent Les. I hope to put this into practice within the next two-3 weeks. I have printed this out for my "notes" file.
      Canon 6D; Canon 760D;Canon G15;Canon 40mm f2.8(Pancake);Canon 50mm f1.8(ii); Canon 17mm-40mm f4L;Canon EF-S 10-18mm f4.5-5.6 IS STM;Canon EF-S 55-250mm f4-5.6 STM lens;Canon 24mm-105mmf4L IS;Canon 70-300mm f4-f5.6 L IS USM;Kenko 1.4x HD TC;Canon 430EX ii flash;Giottos tripod;Manfretto monopod;Cokin P filters + bits and pieces!

      www.flickr.com/photos/nathaniel3390

      North Wales where music and the sea give a great concert!

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

        I once attended one of these events at Howorth (not sure about spelling.) The atmosphere was simply fantastic even though the weather was a bit drizzly, I thoroughly enjoyed it and would recommend it to anyone. Great shots Les, real quality.

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

          Very Detailed Les, some very good information here. Thanks for sharing

          Tom

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

            Really useful info Les, thanks for posting.

            As a beginner very new to photography I understood most of it and it all made perfect sense to me. The bit that went way over my head was the stuff about fill flash. A flash is the one piece of kit I don't own (yet); I've always just used natural light, even when indoors, but this is one area I'd really like to learn more about, especially now you've whetted my appetite.
            Website: www.leerigby.net
            Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/leerigby/

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

                Thanks for that Les, it's not an overly complicated or heavy set-up, which is refreshing to see rather than photographers being laden with loads of equipment. I do have one question; what's your rationalisation behind using the fill flash, rather than available light? I'm interested because many photographers avoid using flash where possible, especially when outdoors and there's plenty of natural light available.
                Within in my Billingham Hadley Large: Canon EOS 550D [Gripped], EF 50mm f/1.8, EF 85mm f/1.8 USM, Tamron 18-270mm Di II VC PZD, EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM, Kenko Teleplus DG AF Extension Tubes [36+20+12] and Speedlite EX430 II.

                Redundant: EF-S 18-55mm lens f/3.5-5.6 IS II and EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

                  Originally posted by PhotoStory View Post
                  Thanks for that Les, it's not an overly complicated or heavy set-up, which is refreshing to see rather than photographers being laden with loads of equipment. I do have one question; what's your rationalisation behind using the fill flash, rather than available light? I'm interested because many photographers avoid using flash where possible, especially when outdoors and there's plenty of natural light available.
                  Thanks for that , regarding fill flash , the main reason I use it is because you don't always have your subjects in good light, even with soft overcast conditions you often end up with shadows particularly round the eyes. Therefore fill flash (and it's not a big amount) bounces just enough light in the face to remove any shadows, but still keep a balance between natural light/flash. As long as you are not too far away from your subject(s) then the settings above (around -1/3 to -2/3 stop on camera & -2/3 on flash).

                  Does this answer your question, please fire away more if it doesn't
                  Concentrate on equipment and you'll take technically good photographs. Concentrate on seeing the light's magic colours and your images will stir the soul. - Jack Dykinga
                  Light makes photography. Embrace light. Admire it. Love it. But above all, know light. Know it for all you are worth, and you will know the key to photography- George Eastman

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

                    Thats a superp article Les......well done you mate

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

                      Thanks for that Les, it does answer my question; it's interesting as it's not something I've ever considered doing before.
                      Within in my Billingham Hadley Large: Canon EOS 550D [Gripped], EF 50mm f/1.8, EF 85mm f/1.8 USM, Tamron 18-270mm Di II VC PZD, EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM, Kenko Teleplus DG AF Extension Tubes [36+20+12] and Speedlite EX430 II.

                      Redundant: EF-S 18-55mm lens f/3.5-5.6 IS II and EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: Street style event shooting, my approach

                        Thanks for this Les. I've got a holiday booked for Pickering in October. I'm umming and ahhing about taking the camera or relying on my bridge. This may tip the balance.
                        Di ~ Trying to take "the" photograph.
                        Di's Flickr

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