Kell Smith
March 27th, 2009, 12:58 PM
I'm shooting a house that has a complete wrap-around deck - from the front, all along the side, and all along the back. So it's three sides of a rectangle. I want to emphasize the view which is spectacular.
I don't have a stabilizer, but even if I did, walking down the deck with the camera seems to give that horror-film effect - the one with the serial killer in the bushes. Great for horror but not if you want people to come stay there!
If I do several pan shots from on the deck, it's choppy because they have to each be from a different position.
The deck is on the second floor, so shooting from downstairs doesn't really show the view.
Also some other issues, - the two bedrooms are very small. I went in with a wide angle but it's still hard to get a good shot. Also, the verticals are distorted which may be unavoidable.
I'm also dealing with the exposure differences between the daylight coming through large beautiful windows. By adjusting the exposure I was able to get a happy medium -slightly overblown but ok - but not really enough to see the view outside. I thought of going out at 'magic hour' but it's in the mountains which would put the outside in shadow at early am or later pm (later pm isn't such a good plan because the west light will be right in those windows). Also I'm not sure if things being in shadow outside would help or hurt.
The deck is definitely a challenge though. Suggestions appreciated - thx in advance.
I don't have a stabilizer, but even if I did, walking down the deck with the camera seems to give that horror-film effect - the one with the serial killer in the bushes. Great for horror but not if you want people to come stay there!
If I do several pan shots from on the deck, it's choppy because they have to each be from a different position.
The deck is on the second floor, so shooting from downstairs doesn't really show the view.
Also some other issues, - the two bedrooms are very small. I went in with a wide angle but it's still hard to get a good shot. Also, the verticals are distorted which may be unavoidable.
I'm also dealing with the exposure differences between the daylight coming through large beautiful windows. By adjusting the exposure I was able to get a happy medium -slightly overblown but ok - but not really enough to see the view outside. I thought of going out at 'magic hour' but it's in the mountains which would put the outside in shadow at early am or later pm (later pm isn't such a good plan because the west light will be right in those windows). Also I'm not sure if things being in shadow outside would help or hurt.
The deck is definitely a challenge though. Suggestions appreciated - thx in advance.