Studio Lighting Tutorial for AWESOME Glamour Lighting – Glamour Photography Tutorial




This glamour lighting setup is really simple. For this studio lighting tutorial I have used two lights and two large reflectors. Your reflectors can be diffusion panels, v-flats or if money is tight- you could make it work for three quarter length shots and headshots with two Walmart reflectors. I showed you these panels in my home studio video.

You can see how I have the strobes setup slightly behind the model and on either side of the white background. This is a standard 9ft wide vinyl seamless. I like the vinyl because it is more durable and wipes clean.

These shots were made with an 85mm f/1.8 lens set at f/5.0 The shutter speed was 1/200th of a second and the ISO was 100.

The most important element to this set of images is obviously not the lighting and the setting – it is the model and her ability to give you lots of personality. When I do a session like this, I shoot very heavy and my focus is on keeping things playful. This series of images are excellent concepts for a modeling portfolio

You could do this shot with speedlights. The placement would be exactly the same and you will want to set them at full power. Also be sure to set the zoom setting on your flash head to it’s widest setting so that you get good coverage on the white background.

If you don’t have the reflectors or a way to make them – you can achieve an almost identical look to this by using a third strobe and bouncing it into the ceiling in front of the model.

LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS VIDEO
set.a.light 3D by Elixxier Software GmbH http://www.elixxier.com/
Tips for building a DIY Home Portrait Studio on a budget : https://youtu.be/cggfTPIQcHs
Vinyl White Backdrop: http://amzn.to/2fHPuuD

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FTC – set.a.light 3D software was supplied to me by Elixxier Software GmbH. No payment was received for making this video and all opinions are my own.

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30 responses to “Studio Lighting Tutorial for AWESOME Glamour Lighting – Glamour Photography Tutorial”

  1. Hey Joe! Excellent video. I noticed part of that dreamy look you mentioned was that slight haze or slight flare look in the end results. Did you shoot with a lens hood attached or just shoot without it in order to get more flare?

  2. Thanks for sharing this knowledge. I love your style of teaching. You keep your explanations informative but lighthearted enough to keep it from being boring. In the diagram the reflectors are black facing the model. Are they used to reflect or to dampen the light? What program do you use to make your diagrams? Keep up the great work! In addition to learning more about lighting, thanks to you I have already built my portable background and will soon be building some led strip lights.

  3. I have been following so many photographers on youtube for so much time and I have never seen you before @Joe Edelman , it's so much fun I just can't stop watching, your videos are so captivating. Congrats, subbed with notifications! 😀

  4. Once again, solid and good quality video. I have had a "artistic break" for a while. I have not shot that much lately. Your video sparked a photo idea and I know just the right model for it. So thank you again and please keep the videos coming. They take time to do (especially this well done) so keeo up the good work ? Ronnie / Finland

  5. Interesting. And I remember reading about that shoot when I was in photojournalism school. And Tri-X!!!! Best film ever!

    So you mentioned a link to reflectors from Walmart? Didn't see the link there. Are they LARGE panels like she show in the lighting diagram?

  6. Hey Joe! Another fantastic video!
    I have a question for you.

    When sony a7 came out i sold my 7d and bought a7
    Now I would like to purchase another dslr
    What would be good option now days for price range of 13-1500?
    In advance thank you!

  7. Thanks Joe, you are an inspiration, love you work , your style, and most the love for others like (amateur) to get inspired and to have the confident that we can do IT. love B&W. i do love color image, but B&W seem to be more interment and they some how speak to you, (the images of course). my thoughts.

  8. These are pretty cool ideas if you know for a fact you don't want to shoot color. But sometimes even if I want to shoot black and white I like the ability to decide after the fact because every so often i end up liking the color more.

  9. Today I found out that you have crawled into my daily life. My girlfriend, who also watches this channel, said she was afraid my video-clip of a music-band will look amateur made. I said that I am also worried that might happen but if I don't start making videos, then I will never learn. She understood and responded with: "Your best shot is your next shot".

  10. It's no wonder Leica produced a digital camera just for B&W photography . Now by following Joe's advice on camera settings for B&W photography, you can achieve true analogue quality B&W images with any digital camera! Thanks Joe for the advice, it's these little things that make a difference, awesome work! Let's support Joe's Patreon efforts so he can continue to assist us in in creating our next best shot!!!!? ?

  11. Hi, love your work. I have small question thou. Do you have some suggestions how to simply transfer Picture Control (Nikon) settings into a lightroom preset or profile, so i can aply it on import or in tether shooting. Especially black and white like in this video. I tried creating a preset by looking on camera back and trying to recreate this in lightroom but maybe there is easier option for lazy people?

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