Nate Haustein
October 29th, 2014, 09:40 PM
Ok, here's a question for the masses:
I have a shoot tomorrow, some of which is outside. Content includes B-roll of a group of young people hanging-out together outdoors and having fun. Smiles, laughter, movement, engagement. You get the idea. Here's the thing –*the weather man is saying complete overcast.
Originally, the look would have been the basic afternoon-backlit-lens-flares kind of thing. Now, I'm not worried (nature's giant softbox and all), but I was wondering if there were any "hot tips" for making things look a little less dreary when the weather throws you a loop.
I've heard of using silver reflectors to add contrast, polarizer filters, and about not shooting the sky. Maybe some negative fill would work well too? Any other advice out there?
This is in the C100 forum, as it's the camera we'll be using, but more just looking for general tips to include in my long-term bag of tricks. Thanks!
I have a shoot tomorrow, some of which is outside. Content includes B-roll of a group of young people hanging-out together outdoors and having fun. Smiles, laughter, movement, engagement. You get the idea. Here's the thing –*the weather man is saying complete overcast.
Originally, the look would have been the basic afternoon-backlit-lens-flares kind of thing. Now, I'm not worried (nature's giant softbox and all), but I was wondering if there were any "hot tips" for making things look a little less dreary when the weather throws you a loop.
I've heard of using silver reflectors to add contrast, polarizer filters, and about not shooting the sky. Maybe some negative fill would work well too? Any other advice out there?
This is in the C100 forum, as it's the camera we'll be using, but more just looking for general tips to include in my long-term bag of tricks. Thanks!