How to photograph a car: Best practices | lynda.com tutorial




Watch this entire course free at http://www.lynda.com/Lightroom-tutorials/Photo-Workshop-Car-Photography-Tips/107471-2.html?utm_medium=viral&utm_source=youtube&utm_campaign=videoupload-lynda-107471-0101. This photography tutorial explores the best practices for shooting a car, and demonstrates techniques for getting ideal automobile images.

This specific tutorial is just a single movie from chapter one of the Photo Workshop: Car Photography Tips course presented by lynda.com author Bryan O’Neil Hughes. The complete Photo Workshop: Car Photography Tips course has a total duration of 1 hour and 20 minutes, shows how to evaluate the lines of a vehicle and compose shots for the greatest dramatic effect, then demonstrates how to edit the images in Photoshop CS6 with the revamped Crop tool, the Iris Blur and Tilt-Shift filters, the Content-Aware Move tool, and more.

Photo Workshop: Car Photography Tips table of contents:

Introduction
1. Car Photography Tips
2. Software Workshop: Editing Photos from the Shoot
3. Software Workshop: Photoshop CS6 New Features Overview

Original source


28 responses to “How to photograph a car: Best practices | lynda.com tutorial”

  1. I loved this video. I can move the car or have the owner reposition the wheels, doors, etc. I'm a hobbyist, and by no means advanced, so the ideas and poses he gave are going to be useful at my next car show. Best car photo video I've seen on youtube thus far.

  2. So he claims he wants the aperture to stay the same but then goes on to say you want to be in Tv or manual mode. Tv will make the aperture auto so that's not what you want. The so called hdr shot is not what I see when looking at the car with my hdr eyes, that was rubbish.

  3. This is so cool… I shoot cars for my work but clearly they aren't like this and the lighting is so non existent I wish I even had a quarter this to work with. What a sick job you have with those kinds of cars!!

  4. You changed your aperture when bracketing your photos….didn't you say not to do that? You can even see it changing on your camera haha. Bloody hell, I would kill to have an overhead lighting rig and a nice car like that to shoot….what a waste.

Leave a Reply