Football Times Cup final

I'm not even going to bother going into the details but thanks to another miscommunication / cock-up it turns out that my pics from the Football Times Cup final won't be going in this week's North Star. Basically I'd talked to the Dingwall office, another photographer had talked to the Inverness office, and Inverness has the final say. Oh what fun.

I've asked the Ross-shire Journal if they can try to squeeze the scissor kick shot in somewhere but I probably won't know if it's going in until I see the paper on Friday.

Meanwhile here are the rest of the pics from the match. I've given bigger versions of these to the Inverness City web site so head over there if you want to see them, they'll probably be posted some time on Tuesday.

Inverness win Football Times Cup

Scissor kick goal shot

There are three football shots that I've always wanted to get. One is a netcam shot of a goal and I've now had a few of those. Another is a netcam shot from inside the goal with the keeper diving towards the remote-controlled camera but I haven't figured out how to do that safely yet. And the third is a shot of a goal being scored from a scissor kick, which I finally got today.

Covering a lot of Balintore matches, I've had plenty of opportunity to catch one of Euan Dance's scissor kicks as he does them quite often, but I usually shoot from the goal line to catch the midfield action so I'm at the wrong angle for the goal mouth.

The shot I got today shows Gavin Nicolson of Inverness scoring the first goal in his team's victory over Golspie in the Football Times Cup final.

Scissor kick goal shot
In theory that's close to being the "decisive moment" because it was taken just after he'd kicked the ball, but I actually prefer this shot taken just before, mainly because Gavin's eyes are open and he's still on his way up.

Scissor kick goal shot
I'll just send both to the paper and leave it up to them to choose. Should be in next week's North Star if you want to look out for it.

Mike & Ali Vass portrait

Brother and sister duo Mike & Ali Vass performed at the Memorial Hall yesterday evening. While planning these portraits I had intended for them to be converted to dramatic black & white, but when I saw how great Ali's hair looked it was an easy decision to leave them in colour.

I'm posting them here in a wide ratio. I know the paper will crop all the black off the sides but this is how I like them. Here's the safe shot…

Mike & Ali Vass
And here's a silly one that I like a lot. I think both Mike and Ali's personalities come across really well but I'm not sure what they'll think of it so I'm going to check with them before sending it to the paper.

Mike & Ali Vass
Shot specs:
Canon 1D • 24-70 f/2.8L • 70mm • 1/500s • f/5.6 • ISO 200 • 5600K

Lighting specs:
This was the first time I used a proper hair light. I've used lights behind people before but with this shot the plan all along was to have a black background so I wanted to use a hair light to put a subtle accent around the subjects. The hair light was a Vivitar 285HV on a light stand to right of frame, about eight feet high and eight feet from the subjects, snooted to avoid flaring the lens. The key light was a Canon 550EX into a silver brolly to left of frame, about eight feet high and four feet from the subjects. Both strobes fired by Pocket Wizards. I didn't use a black background. The 1/500s shutter speed and f/5.6 aperture at ISO 200 in a dimly lit village hall was enough to overpower the ambient light, although if you crank the brightness on these shots you can still make out a few background details.

Mark Austin photo

I can't tell you how much of an honour it was that Mark Austin's father Alasdair chose a photo that I took of Mark to give to the newspapers.

The photo was taken in December 2005 at the Tain Royal Academy end-of-year seniors dance. I thought Mark's many friends may want a digital copy of the photo so here it is. Click this little version to view/save the larger version. Sorry it isn't the hi-res file but it's a decent size for doing little prints, posting on Bebo etc.

Mark Austin

Golspie F.C. league champions poster

Last year's football league and cup posters proved very popular so I've made one for Golspie who were crowned this season's champions of the North Caledonian League after defeating Bunillidh at the weekend.

The posters feature the team photo along with action from the match, goal celebration shots, and pictures taken during the award presentations. Size is an impressive 19 inches by 13 inches, presented on premium gloss photo paper which is very durable and high quality.

For individual orders the price is £14 including postage and packing, but if someone from Golspie F.C. can organise a bulk order then I'll do them for £12 each with no postage charge.

Golspie F.C. poster

Superman photo game

This little web-based game must be quite old because it was promoting the Superman Returns movie but it's great fun: Stop Press! (Thanks to Rich Obrey for posting the link over on Sports Shooter.)

Product shot set-ups

Here are the set-ups for the two product shots of the 285HV.

The lighting in the first one was simple enough, just a direct flash to light the subject and a snooted flash to throw a splash of light onto the background. The direct flash was gelled with a CTO (orange) and the camera's white balance was set to 3000K to make the background flash go dark blue.

Click the image to see it on Flickr with notes:

285HV blue background set-up

The levitation photo was more complicated to set-up but the lighting was simple. Obviously the subject had to be held up in some way, and in this case it was suspended from a background support with white thread. The thread was then removed in Photoshop.

Again, click the image to see it on Flickr with notes:

285HV levitation set-up

I'm *this* close to figuring out how to do the levitation photo without needing to use Photoshop. As soon as I can figure out the technique I'll do a product shot for the new toy that just joined my gear bag…

Two lights and three black belts

The only thing I knew about this picture of three young Kempo black belts was that it would require some kind of lighting effect. I didn't know for sure if there was going to be one person or three people, their ages or their heights, but I did know that I'd be doing the picture in a school gymnasium or somewhere close to it, so it would need lighting to give it a bit of punch.

Kempo black belts
Having been in this particular gym once before I thought I remembered there being climbing bars on all the walls, so I had planned to set-up the shot in a nearby corridor with a brick wall as a background. Luckily when I arrived at the gym I found that there was in fact one brick wall that I could use, although there was some chalk graffiti that I needed to clean off first.

The lighting set-up was as simple as it looks: My new Vivitar 285HV with a CTO (orange) gel on a light stand pointing at the wall, and a Canon 550EX fired into a silver brolly about eight feet high and six feet from the subjects, to camera left. Both flashes on manual power settings and fired by Pocket Wizards.

I had arrived early so I had about half an hour to set-up and do test shots, then I marked the floor with tape to show where the light stands should go and moved them out of the way until it was time to do the picture.

We quickly ran through a variety of 'safe' poses before trying the arms-folded one for a bit of attitude. That was the pose I had envisioned all along for a group of three, and the final image is exactly what I had planned the day before, so you see: Some shoots do go according to plan!

Here's a wide view of the lighting set-up:

Lighting set-up

Levitating product shot

The great thing about David Hobby's Strobist blog is that David shows you how to do all sorts of clever things using small flashes and simple set-ups. The bad thing is that there isn't much left for the rest of us to write about!

David's tutorial on how to photograph a light bulb also explained how to make an object appear to float in mid-air. Easy when you know how, but effective. There's an easier way though, just as effective and with some advantages, and that's the technique I used for the following 'levitation' photograph

One advantage of this technique is that you could have the product reflected in a shiny floor, which would not be possible with the light bulb technique. For this shot I didn't want a reflection but I did want a shadow, which is something else that you couldn't do with the light bulb technique. See if you can figure out how it was done and I'll post the explanation along with the one for the other product shot posted this morning. Remember, it's very simple and, truth be told, quite dull, so don't over-think it and come up with some crazy complicated solution.

Levitating product shot

Vivitar 285HV

There are many joys in using the high-end Canon gear but flash is NOT one of them. You pay a fortune for evaluative metering and wireless operation but in the end you'll stick the flash on manual and use third-party triggers for anything that matters because infra red can't be trusted.

The new Canon 580EXII offers weather-sealing (shamefully long-overdue) and improved metering, but it will retail for around £400. On the other hand, Vivitar recently relaunched the 285HV. It uses decades-old thyristor technology for metering, you can pick one up brand new for £80, and most importantly IT WORKS. My first one arrived this week…

Vivitar 285HV
There are reliable workarounds for the quirks of Canon flash metering. I know them all, I use them all, and I resent them all. Nikon flashes have good automatic metering, off-brand flashes have good automatic metering, even the cheapest point-and-shoot cameras and disposables have good automatic metering. Canon has really let photographers down with their unreliable and inconsistent flash metering, and it's especially bad when you consider that Canon flashes are some of the most expensive units on the market.

Here's how you get a good exposure with the Vivitar 285HV: Stick it on your camera, select the appropriate colour-coded setting for your ISO and aperture, and take the picture. Done. Your images will be consistently well-exposed. Use bounce flash and they get better. Use the flash off the camera and they get better again. Wherever you put the flash, whatever you point it at, it gives you a correct auto-exposure, even when photographing objects that are mostly black or white which is the biggest challenge a flash will ever face.

Update: Originally there were some sample images here, including a few snapshots of my parents but it turns out that they don't want any photos of themselves on the Internet. I don't have time at the moment to re-write the post and prepare new samples so for now I've just removed them all. Sorry, I'll try to post some different ones when I get chance.

But the bottom line is: If you use Canon flashes then take this as my encouragement to put them away and get yourself a real flash. If you're thinking of buying a Canon flash soon then save yourself a lot of money and buy a 285HV at a fraction of the price. It has a manual mode so it will be just as useful for creative work, but with the added bonus of a good auto mode for fast work and fun shots.

As an aside, my picture of the 285HV at the top of this post is a fairly standard set-up for a product shot but I don't recall seeing any online tutorials explaining how the effect is achieved. It's not Photoshop, it's a lighting effect, and it's really simple so when I get time over the next couple of days I'll explain how to do it and post some behind-the-scenes shots.