Author Archives: brett365
New project
Cheadle Arts Festival Sat 12 – Sat 19 Mar 2011
Brett Trafford photography is happy to join this historic market town in a week-long feast of fun for all ages! From crafts, art, workshops, demonstrations and concerts, Something for everyone!
As part of the festival there is art in the high street where a number of shop fronts are used to display work from local artist, I have my work on display at Hallmark cards and am running a free prize draw for a portrait shoot, just call in to Hallmark cards for an entry form.
New toy
I had not realised I had not posted on here for so long, but i have been very busy working on an exhibition and photography course and a web site (a new side line). So just to fill a gap here is a shot taken last week while I was up in the Lake District, it was taken on the other reason I’ve not blogged much, my new Nikon D7000.
Work in progress
Finally got around to sorting out a sales site for the pictures, now all I need to do is up load and sort 1,000+ images.
Other work in progress is a 5 week photography course, this is due to start in February and although the bulk of it is already written I will find my next few weeks very busy rewriting bits and compiling the photographs.
For the last bit of work in progress look at the image below, an attempt at a change in style, trying to bring more darkness in to my images.
A new start
Well after ticking over for 2 years this blog finally gets to be put to it’s intended use. The photography business is now full time so this blog will be used to up date the world on what is going on, or at least the things I can talk about. I will also try to link it to Facebook to make its as interactive as possible.
So the first item of news is that the business web site, Brett Trafford.com has had an update, the site is an on going project and the last changes finish stage 1 (i.e. all the pages now have something on them). The next stage is a page dedicated to my corporate customers and also an on-line check out, once I’ve decided on who to use.
That is all for the moment but watch this space.
HDR photographs
I have wanted to write a post on how to create HDR images for quite some time, in fact since the last post on this blog in September last year, but when i got around to researching the subject i found that there are loads of very good tutorials out there. So instead of spending loads of time just rehashing the same subject i thought i would do something a bit different.
When i first stumble across a new technique in photography it is usually not in the form of a how to guide, but just a random image with no explanation of how it was done. So my first step is to Google it. In the case of HDR images loads came up on the search and a few lead to some great how to articles.
My second step is normally to part read the guides and just have a go, make a mess of it, then go back and read the guilde all the way through (it must be a man thing).
Now as i have said there are lots of guides out there, i will link to a few at the bottom of the post, but what i found was missing in most cases was a collection of before and after shots.
Its all very well showing a collection of great images, but how can a novice know which shots are the best ones to work on, i have 1000’s of images and it was just trial and error that gave me the insight needed and if i had just a few before and after shots to compare it would have saved me hours.
Here is my solution, a collection of 5 before and after HDR shots, i will try to post some more when i have the time. The first picture of the pair is the normal untouched image and by untouched i mean that nothing has been done to it, except cropping to match the finished HDR for better comparison, so these picture are not looking their best and could be improved by some time in photoshop.
This first image is of the Ribblehead viaduct in Yorkshire and although the normal image was OK, by HDR-ing it the detail was brought out in the brick work and the sky made more dramatic.
This is Kep, and the normal image was very poor, a bad exposure because of the snow, but as i shoot in RAW it was saved by the HDR.
Another poor exposure, this time due to the subject matter and the conditions, with the much greater range in the HDR more of the details was saved.
One of the reasons i love the technique is that it highlights detail so very well, but it does play havoc with the colours, for me in this shot after comparing the HDR with the normal i think it could be just a bit too much and if i did it again the colour would get toned down.
This image unlike the last one really works for me, it helps that i love the subject matter and feel so proud to have got such a good image of it. The boost of the detail and the colour lift the image away from the dullness of the normal shot.
As promised here are a few links to some tutorials, the first one was my favourite guide when i started.
Lesson 10 Improving your technique
No matter who you are or what level you take photos at, you will find that you always take better photo of a particular subject than anything else. If you take lots of photos and try to photograph different things this stands out more quickly than if you only take a few shots a year and mostly of the same type. My unknown speciality only came to light when shooting photos for my blog, I noticed that I tended to do better shots when shooting water with loads of reflection in it. So identifying what you do best is just a matter of looking at all your photos and seeing what looks the best and then seeing if there is a link.
But this post is not about playing to your strengths, you already do that, this is about using other photographers strengths to better your own.
As I have said every photographer has a style and with the thousands of blogs and web sites out there it takes only a short hunt to find loads of differing styles and approaches to photography; how to make use of this wealth of knowledge is the challenge.
First off you need to find some good sites, I use blog indexes and stumble to find new sites and I also visit people who visit me, thinking that they will either be photographers or people that visit lots of photography sites.
From just looking at different types of work you will pick up on new ways of looking at things and be inspired to photograph things you just have never bothered with before. This is all common sense and we all do it, to some degree, without thinking about it, but how many take this next step.
Before I shot my first wedding as the photographer, rather than a guest with a camera, I spent days looking at wedding photographers web sites, learning to see as they see and seeing what images I needed to capture. You do not get any second chances with a wedding so this was the best way to learn, I known this because I do it all the time, the next step after just looking at other people’s picture, recreating them.
Now by recreating them I don’t mean copying the image exactly but deconstructing the shot and trying to get the same sort of image.
I have just spent some time photographing handbags, the images were needed for a new web site, now I have never tried this before and it needed to be of a standard comparable to other sites selling the same type of thing. So I first went looking for examples of the type of shot needed and found that although the quality of the image varied, the best shots were very simple; a bag on a white back ground. Easy, so I placed the bag flat on the floor, on a white card and shot it. It looked crap. Next I sat the bag on a table with a white back drop, still crap, but by now I had 2 shots of my own to compare to the ideal and could see what I had done and also what was missing. The final shot was with the bag suspended in front of a white background, 2 flashes and some time spent in Photoshop. The learning that I got from this was immense and was something I could have tried years ago but had thought it was to easy to bother with.
Looking at other photographers work is by far the best way to grow and if you see a style of shot you like trying to reconstruct it not only teaches you a new way of working it can give you a whole new insight to the photographer original image.
One photographer that influenced me was Lisa from Glimpses through the mashrabeya, she shoots allsorts for her blog, but there is a style that has a recurring theme, black and white images which have lots of blurring and bleeding on the edges, very narrow depth of focus also plays a large part of the over all effect. I loved the effect so much I tried a number of times to recreate it and a number of my favourite shots taken for the blogs use this style, although not as well as she does yet.
So find out what your good at and then find a shot that is totally different and try to recreate it, it won’t always work the first time, but each time you try you will learn a little more