字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Before we start I'm going to put the question timings in the description below the video. I'm Karl Taylor and this is our top 10 most common photography questions. Thanks to Squarespace for sponsoring this video. Now the reason we're here is because I've just been out with been learning to fly this DJI Hasselblad drone and we actually got some really cool shots here at sunrise but we thought we'd take the opportunity to do these top 10 questions while we're here. So let's kick it off. Question 1 - Can I use branded items in my portfolio? The answer to that is yes but I would be careful and I say be careful because I think most big brands won't mind you using their products in your portfolio or on your website as long as you don't show them in a derogatory fashion so if your work is to a good standard and you have the ability to show their items looking really nice then I can't see they're really going to have issue with it and a lot of top photographers do this, myself included we take pictures of brands speculatively or brands that we haven't worked for we create amazing images and then we basically publish those on our websites I've never got in trouble for it and neither of any of my colleagues. Question 2: What's the difference between the modeling lamp and the flash in a studio light? Now this is something that confuses a lot of people that are new to photography when you look at a studio light or you see a studio lighting setup you see all of this continuous light shining in there you see light coming out of there and then you see this burst to flash when the image is actually taken now people are wondering well where did that flash come from well the answer is the flash comes from the same place as where the continuous light is coming from in a studio light you have what's called a modeling light sticking out and then around it you have a flash tube so the modeling light is just there to allow you to see what you're doing to see the image to see where the shadows are going to see the shape of the light and then the flash fires when you actually take the picture and that's the one that records the image so don't need to confuse the two they're both coming from the same place. Question 3: I want to set up a studio, what studio lights and basic modifiers should I get? Well I'm gonna park that one for now because we're doing another video on my top 10 accessories and a few tips on studio photography so we'll include that in that video. Question 4: How do i price my work? Well this one is always a little bit tricky because people are unsure what to charge or how to work it out. Now in commercial photography, we work on something called a day rate now your day rate is basically what you charge for your eight-hour day and we also half that as well so we can charge a minimum would be our half-day rate so most commercial photographers wouldn't work for less than a half a day because the time it takes to set up the studio get all the lights prepared and everything else. So base it on a day rate, you need to work out what you're gonna charge for your day rate how much should that be well commercial photographers day rates can range from anything from maybe $500 to $1,000 right up to sort of $5,000 or more for some top photographers maybe fashion photographers etc for their single day so you have to work out where you sit in the market how good is your work how good is your portfolio and what are your competitors charging that or as good as you or at about the same standard.Once you know your day rate obviously your work for a two day project is two days day rate charge post-production rates though a charge usually at about 50 or 60 percent of your day rate and prep and organization and organizing the shooting in advance of the actual shoot is usually charged at about 50% of your day rate as well so you've got your sort of pre-shoot rates and then your post-production rates and then you've got your actual creative fee day rate in there as well. Question 5: I'm looking to buy a new lens which one would you recommend for landscape, portrait or product photography? Okay let's deal with product photography first my most commonly used lenses in product photography on my 80mm and my 100mm. Those are both fixed lenses, prime lenses and that's on a medium format camera. Now if that was on 35 mm full frame that would be about 60mm and about 80mm on a 35mm full-frame. Now those lenses people often ask me ... Well why don't you use the the macro lens? And the reason is that the macro lens is a 120mm macro and I find that focal length a little bit long for the type of product work I do I want to be a little bit closer to my product I want to feel a little bit more intimate with the products so that's why I go for the 80 or the 100 mil fix lens. For portraiture I use the 100mm fix lens the same lens that I use actually for a lot of product photography that's an F 2.2 lens that would be equivalent to about an 85mm 1.2 or 1.4 lens in the 35mm format and that's a great lens for portraiture but you can use any lens from about 80mm up to about 135mm for portraiture but remember the longer you go in focal length you might make people look a little bit too chunky looking. For landscape work, my favourite lens in the 35mm format is the 16 - 35 zoom that gives me the most versatility. Question 6: What camera should I buy for beginner or for advanced or professional level? This is a difficult one to answer because technology is changing all the time we've seen cameras shift from film cameras medium format film into full frame 35 mil digital crop sensor cameras we've got full frame sorry we've got medium format digital and now where there's this whole advancement into mirrorless cameras as well there's actually no difference between mirrorless cameras and normal DSLRs in the full-frame 35 mil format they'll both take exactly the same picture just one's got an electronic viewfinder and no mirror the other one's got a mirror and you can see the image so don't worry about that there's no quality difference between those two cameras. My personal choice would always be to go for a full-frame 35 mil if you can obviously some of the smaller sensors give you a more compact camera and they're cheaper to buy and if you're doing sort of street photography that may work well but if you're looking for shallower depth of field and more versatility with the lenses than a full-frame 35 mil camera is probably the format to opt for if you're not going for a medium format camera. I would actually think about keeping your money and spending more of your money on your lenses better optical quality equals better pictures in my opinion and less money spent on gizmos on a camera that you're never gonna use think about things like if the cameras got 15 frames per second or it's got about five billion focus points are you really ever going to use those I usually focus my camera in manual so some of these features that you'll pay for extra on a camera body you may never use and you may have been better keeping your money for lenses instead. Question 7: What is the best monitor to use? Do you calibrate your monitor and how often? Well I use an EIZO monitor and I've also got an ASUS monitor as well EIZO is the top brand of calibrated monitor that they are quite expensive, I've got a 4k colour edge 31 inch monitor I think it's about four or five thousand dollars so it's an expensive tool but what that allows me to do is it allows me to see my work super super clearly in super quality correct colors and then I feel confident when I'm handing that work over to the client for a big ad campaign I feel confident that those images have been delivered at the correct exposure the correct color balance the monitor self calibrates about every 200 hours now less expensive than the ISO are the maybe be NEC range the Asus range some of the Philips monitors have entry-level calibrated monitors and then there's other brands like Ben Q which are not familiar with but I believe you can calibrate so again unfortunately it's one of the things you know you get what you pay for and you're just gonna have to purchase the best that you can afford. Question 8: I want to work as a photographer's assistant how do I do this and what skills will I need? Well working as an assistant is really a great way to gain experience and learn about photography, I've worked as an assistant some of the top photographers that I know of all worked as an assistant at some point. The best opportunity for you to get work as an assistant to a good photographer is to make sure you've got some extra skills in your repertoire because that will make you more employable an assistant's job is basically to move lights around carry stuff, position things, do what the photographer says while you while he's looking through camera and follow his directions of what he needs. Now listen, pretty much anyone can do that if they've got a bit of common sense about them but if you're able to go into a studio and say look I've got assisting experience I know how to change modifiers I know what tool the modifiers are I understand about f-stops 10th of an f-stop color balance and all that sort of stuff but if you're able to say in addition to that I'm also really good as a digital artist or I can do really good Photoshop work or I can help you with video editing clips or any other skill that you can basically sell yourself a little bit further that will be useful to that photographer in their business so upskill yourself you're going to increases your chances of employability. Question 9: How do you market yourself and how do you market yourself when you use started out in photography? Well things have changed a lot in the industry since I started out I started out back in the days of film before even the internet was a viable option now we've got Instagram social media websites and all those things now they're all great platforms to show off your work but do they really connect with your audience because basically someone's got to find their way to your platform and to your social media space to know anything about you and that's more difficult. Back in the day we used to send out printed post cards, printed portfolios, printed brochures and we'd send those to art directors all around the city and basically try to make appointments to get and see them and you try to develop those personal relationships and the very the very process of actually delivering something tactile like a printed image or a bound portfolio makes people pay more attention. Back in the day I used to have six really large leather bound or acrylic bound portfolios and I'd have those couriered out to different art directors and then a week later I'd have the courier collect those and then take them to someone else so it was a little bit of an expensive marketing campaign but it really made an impact now obviously your work needs to be a really high standard don't forget the very fact that there's no point marketing yourself if your work isn't really up there compared to your competitors obviously the Internet and the other areas you can market yourself on and in social media first sorry social photography like weddings portraits that sort of stuff then social media and using your existing customers to promote you can be a great way as well. Question 10: Where do you get your ideas from? This is the last question actually a lot of people look at some of my images and they think wow that's amazing where did you come up with that idea well the truth of it is actually it's a lot of the ideas I don't come up with at all some of the images that we work on for advertising campaigns and clients and companies those come from the art director or their marketing team and they basically give us a brief and mood boards and ideas and sketches and they say this is what we want to try and achieve and my job is just to execute it and make it look real and make it look believable so a lot of those images the ideas are never the photographer's most commercial advertising photographers are working and executing someone else's ideas however fortunately with my education business at Karl Taylor education comm we have lots of opportunities to create our own ideas so I create images create concepts and create mood boards myself to execute those ideas when I do that I do something called pre visualization and that's where I sketch the image out and design the image and the very process of sketching the image down and drawing it helps you develop those ideas further you build mood boards and you build things up and I basically follow the same process that we follow as if I was shooting for a client but I just go through the procedure of doing the pre-visualization part myself those were our top 10 most common photography questions as I said we're gonna have another video with my top 10 accessories and some tips on studio photography as well I'm Karl Taylor thanks for watching. This video is brought to you by Squarespace from websites and online stores tomorr cutting tools and analytics Squarespace is the all-in-one platform to build a beautiful online presence and run your business head to squarespace.com for a free trial and when you're ready to launch go to squarespace.com/karl to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain
B1 中級 美國腔 十大攝影問題解答! (Top 10 Photography Questions Answered!) 5 2 Henry 楊 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字