SIXCOLORS Art Tickles

After the Light: High-Pass Post Production
Let’s get one thing straight first: I am no Photoshop wizard. I learned at the paper to use it sparingly, and my goal is always to do most of my work in-camera.

But a lot of people have asked about some of my post techniques, so I wanted to share one of my favorites. It’s quick, easy and adds a cool, controllable look to your photos. And it mixes especially well with photos that have been lit.
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People use high pass in a lot of different ways. And really, the high-pass filter itself is just a step in the process that ends with the combination of two layers. High-pass has a bad name because a lot of people go way over the top with it. But in moderation it adds a nice edge — and it can be used to give a uniform look to a series of otherwise disparate photos.

Here is how I do it.

Here is a pretty straight (i.e., no high-pass) photo of baritone Steven Eddy, whom I photographed last year for the Howard County Arts Council.

One light source — very straightforward stuff. It’s lit with an White Lightning and an Octa soft box, against an out-of-focus sunset in a forest.

This is a “before” photo. And you’ll notice the differences in the “after” photo (up top) are pretty subtle. More on that later. My goal is to add a little bit of a pop to this photo, with a little more control than if I just used curves.

First, I am going to create a duplicate layer of the photo in Photoshop. You can do this in the Layers menu, or (on a Mac) with CMD ‘J’. You now have two identical photos, sitting on top of each other. Bear in mind that you can only see the top one right now.

Next, we desaturate the top layer. You can do it with your Hue and Saturation adjustment, or go to Image-> Adjustments -> Desaturate.

Now, you are looking at a B&W version of your photo — which is sitting on top of an unseen color version.

Next step is to apply the high-pass filter. This is a slider, and there is some preference involved as the slider will have a lot of control over the final look.

I tend to hang out around 80 in the radius, and that number is a function of your file size. I shoot 12MP photos, which means ~4k dots on the long side. If you shoot larger or smaller files, adjust your radius proportionally. And again, this is an ‘add salt to taste’ thing.

Here is what your pic will look like now.

Remember, you are adding high pass to the top, B&W layer. But there is an unchanged color layer underneath that you cannot see right now.

Next, we are going to combine those layers in the layer palette.

By default, the opacity slider in your layers palette is probably set to 100%. That means you are viewing the top layer — a B&W, hi-pass filtered layer — with no transparency at all.

Let’s combine the two layers. Under “layers” dropdown in your layers palette, combine them by choosing “hard light”.

You’ll get a photo that looks very Nike/Gatorade ad-looking, which is IMO way, way too much.

Take your opacity slider and bring it from 100% to 0%. You’ll see your original photo appear again, as the top, combined/HP’d layer disappears.

Now, crank your opacity slider up until you get the look you want.

Here is the photo from the top of the post again, which is pretty subtle as I only took the opacity slider to 35%. (I tend to hang out in the 25% to 50% neighborhood, depending on the lighting style and subject matter.)

My preference is to use it at a level to where it is almost not there. I like to bring it down to zero, the slowly slide it up until the look starts to get just a little too strong. Then I back it off a bit.

Flatten your image to lock it in and you are done.
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Some Considerations

Is this ‘destructive,’ as some Photoshop folks will surely complain? Yes, it is.

And I don’t care. It is a quick technique, and I will have already saved a toned, dust-spotted version before I add high-pass.

Are there other ways to do it? Certainly, but this is mine.

You can find other techniques by Googling “high-pass filter” and photoshop. Go crazy.

Can you go to far with this? Oh, yeah.

And that’s when photos all start to look the same. I like to crank it up until I can tell it is there, then back it off a tad.

If you a newspaper shooter, it occurred to me long after the fact that this might be a good technique to make your photos (especially sports pics) better survive the repro process.

The technique adds midrange contrast, tames highlights and shadows and loses a little saturation. And that’s tailor-made for many crappy offset newspaper presses that print on Charmin.

If you want to know more — including a version with more steps that gets you to a more specific look, I recommend checking out Dustin Snipes’ excellent tutorial. He cranks it up a little (okay, a lot) more than I do, but he gets a cool look that works well in the context of his sports portraiture.

Tent Pole Light Stands: More Details

Due to popular demand, Swedish photographer Peter Karlsson has created a more explanatory video on his tent pole light stand. They run about 1 lb. each, and pack very small and flat. They can be a good option for traveling interior/portrait shooters.

Got questions? Peter is answering them in the comments section of his blog post. Oh, and take a moment to look at his portfolio, too. It is all speedlight-driven.

Of his diminutive lights, Peter says, “clients sometimes look a little puzzled about their tinyness,” but hey, it gets the job done.

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Jan 272012

Travel, Light
UPDATE: Corrects backpack, adds links to backpack and duffel.
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I have logged a lot of air miles over the last few years, and am getting ready to pile on a few more en route to Dubai this week.

On of the biggest advantages of being speedlight-based is being able to avoid the excess-baggage mafia. Given that I usually travel with computer, camera gear, lighting gear (including stands, etc.) in addition to the typical clothing stuff, I thought I would do a quick post on what and how I pack.
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Two In the Belly

First off, I always strive to get all of my clothing/personal items into a medium-sized L.L. Bean White Mountain backpack. I can get a ton of stuff in there, and it doesn’t take any hands to schlep it. That bag always gets checked.

The second checked bag is an L.L. Bean roller duffel. It is modestly sized but can really swell up to handle extra clothing and/or souvies for the kids. That bag takes my light stands, umbrellas, grip, mods, etc. Nothing in the soft roller is very fragile. And more important, if it gets lost there is nothing in there that I cannot replace quickly in any medium-sized city.

Being able to throw four light stands and umbrellas into a normal-sized bag and still have room for plenty of other stuff is one of the reasons I love 5-section compact stands and Westcott double-fold umbrellas. Pint-sized powerhouses.

Two in the Cabin

Never lost a bag yet, knock wood. But if I do, the goal is to still be able to do a shoot with the carry-on stuff. To that end, the most important stuff stays with me.

My one carry-on bag, pictured above, is a Think Tank Airport International Security. I cannot tell you how much I love this roller. It is built like a tank, has locks (and locking cable), holds all of my critical stuff and is designed to be a legal carry on just about anywhere in the world. They make a bigger one that meets U.S. domestic limits, but that one is too big for many international carriers.

Pictured above, it has my core and/or breakable gear. In addition to the pockets full of cards, papers, gels, fold-flat Lumiquest mods, speedstraps, etc., here is what I typically take in the main compartment:

1. Nikon D3 — main body.

2. Nikon D300 — backup body. Bought two weeks before the D700 was announced, of course. Grr.

3. Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 — my most frequently used lens by a mile.

4. Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 — great lens, but I use it way less now that I do not shoot for papers anymore.

5. Nikon 55 f/2.8 AI (MF) Macro lens

6. Holga (80mm portrait) and Diana (wide) plastic lenses in Nikon mounts — light, cheap, quirky and occasionally invaluable.

7. Six Nikon SB-800s — I know, I am a little bit addicted.

8. Orbis Ring Flash Adapter — gets heavy use. Will sometimes take a Ray Flash, depending on circumstances.

9. Charger for D3 — (D300 charger rides in checked bag.)

10. Two Nikon SC-17 cords — one neutered, one not.

11. Honl grids (underneath other stuff) — prefer the 1/8 to the 1/4.

12. Four Nikon diffuser domes for SB-800s.

13. Three PW Plus II’s (and 4 more in the second case.) These will get me by just in case, as I can SU-4 the other SB-800′s.

14. Extra AA’s — Kodak slow-drain Ni-MH’s are my favorites.

and, special for this trip…

15. A couple RadioPopperJrX’s, because I am doing the GPP Shootout against JoeyL and Zack Arias. And I just know Zack is planning on trying to pwn me with his Pocket Wizards after what we did to him last year.

Oh, and I got me a nice, long SYNC CORD, too, Mr. Zack. ‘Cause I wasn’t born yesterday.

Last, I have a small “personal” bag which gets the laptop, iPhone, spare hard drive, coupla magazines and a book. And, just in case: An extra T-shirt, skvvies and a toothbrush for the inevitable airport delays/cancellations. And for overnight flights, I have a big, poofy jacket that I wear onto the plane. It transforms into a pretty nice pillow once I am curled into that window seat.

I shop for tickets inclusive of baggage fees, so I compare apples to apples. (That’s one reason I love Southwest airlines.) Delta, which charges out the wazoo for checked bags, for some reason has no fees if you are going to the Middle East. So this week, it’s Delta for me.

(For lots more very good gear/packing/flying info, I recommend the blog Flying With Fish, by Steve Frischling.)

Seventeen-hour trip up next = guaranteed Hobbit feet by the time we get to DXB. But at least my gear will be none the worse for wear.
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NOTE: If you are posting Q’s on the Flickr photo page about the Think Tank bag, please be aware tham I am in Dubai right now and cannot access Flickr as it is a banned site. The Firefox plugin that worked last year is not working this year, either. Solutions welcomed!

Light Fare: The “Jarvie Window”
Here’s a new use for your ring flash.

Salt Lake City-based photographer Scott Jarvie made a unique set of portraits using a Ray Flash ring flash adapter and an 8mm fisheye lens.

Gimmicky? Perhaps. Fun and creative? Yup.

Cue the flood of imitators on Flickr in 3, 2, 1…

(Thanks much to Ben for the tip via the comments section.)

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