Asher Kelman
OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
These dancers were at the members of the Professional Dance Program at the Trudl Zipper Dance Institute Saturday night. I'm getting to better follow the choreography. I use a 5D Mark II in a Sound blimp with a 70-200 2.8 L IS lens. My range of f stop is f 4.0 to 5.6 and the ISO is at 6400 with shutter speed at 1/200 sec
© Asher Kelman Tableau #1
Colburn School of Music Trudl Zipper Dance Institute Professional Dance Program
© Asher Kelman Tableau #2
Colburn School of Music Trudl Zipper Dance Institute Professional Dance Program
It's tough to get lights ameliorated in anyway. Telling folk that it's the ration fo lighting that gives the effects falls on deaf ears and a lot of the time there are fewer lumens arriving on the dancers than fat chickens roaming free in the streets of streets of Kabul! So one has to make a lot of compromises. The shutter speed is not as fast as one would like to freeze movement. The aperture is wider than one would wish for optimal DOF and the ISO for sure is way beyond desirable for the best prints to be made.
So, if you had the opportunity to reshoot these moody compositions, how would you approach the lighting. What lights, modifiers, gels etc might you bring into play. Think "reproduce the sensibility of the live stage shot" then "How can this be carried further?"
Thanks for your imaginative ideas and interest!
As always appreciating input!
Asher

© Asher Kelman Tableau #1
Colburn School of Music Trudl Zipper Dance Institute Professional Dance Program

© Asher Kelman Tableau #2
Colburn School of Music Trudl Zipper Dance Institute Professional Dance Program
It's tough to get lights ameliorated in anyway. Telling folk that it's the ration fo lighting that gives the effects falls on deaf ears and a lot of the time there are fewer lumens arriving on the dancers than fat chickens roaming free in the streets of streets of Kabul! So one has to make a lot of compromises. The shutter speed is not as fast as one would like to freeze movement. The aperture is wider than one would wish for optimal DOF and the ISO for sure is way beyond desirable for the best prints to be made.
So, if you had the opportunity to reshoot these moody compositions, how would you approach the lighting. What lights, modifiers, gels etc might you bring into play. Think "reproduce the sensibility of the live stage shot" then "How can this be carried further?"
Thanks for your imaginative ideas and interest!
As always appreciating input!
Asher
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