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Good Lighting/Bad Lighting

Good Lighting/Bad Lighting. We have to learn how to take good photos before we can edit them. Even though we CAN edit them in Photoshop, it is easier if we have good photos to work with. Take great photos in the first place=easier time in the lab. The Numbers.

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Good Lighting/Bad Lighting

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  1. Good Lighting/Bad Lighting

  2. We have to learn how to take good photos before we can edit them. • Even though we CAN edit them in Photoshop, it is easier if we have good photos to work with. • Take great photos in the first place=easier time in the lab.

  3. The Numbers • Cell phone/ipod pictures are harder to edit because they are smaller in size. • 12 megapixels or higher is easiest to edit (best if in RAW format).

  4. Examples Indoor photo with bad lighting and no flash.

  5. Examples Indoor photo with back lighting and no flash.

  6. Examples Indoors with good lighting and no flash

  7. Flash • Do: Use for a fill flash when taking outdoor portraits. • Do: Use it to bounce light if you absolutely need it. • Don’t: Use at night • Don’t: Use indoors (Turn on the lights instead)

  8. Examples Indoors with good lighting and flash

  9. Indoors with bad lighting and flash Examples

  10. Examples Outdoors with good lighting and no flash (but not a portrait)

  11. Examples This is not the best picture, but I angled my flash so that it wouldn’t be as harsh as it normally would be.

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