Hi Everyone! We’re excited to announce this next course, Overcoming Difficult Lighting. Our most unique training ever. This course will strengthen your ability to defeat various lighting challenges.
We believe this subject is covered best by incorporating multiple instructors to educate on their particular area of expertise. It is a new concept, and we think you’re going to love it.
Overcoming Difficult Lighting course will include three parts:
- Landscapes: Dealing with Flat Lighting with Scott Davenport
- Macro: Dealing with Harsh Light with Don Komarechka
- Portraits: Dealing with Harsh Light
We’re incredibly excited to produce this series and hope you enjoy! Not a member of ON1 Plus? Learn more →
6 comments on “Now Available! Overcoming Difficult Lighting Course”
On August 2, 2019 at 7:13 pm Kenny Wright wrote:
I’m excited….can’t wait. This is going to be very interesting.
Kenny
On August 6, 2019 at 3:57 am Alan Bruce wrote:
I am looking forward to this course 🙂
On August 6, 2019 at 8:50 am Sherry Laflamme wrote:
This will be great! Can really use this for our blinding summer light here in Southwest Florida.
On August 7, 2019 at 3:53 pm Paul Scicluna wrote:
The challenges are great with those conditions will be good hear from the best how they handle them
On August 8, 2019 at 5:25 am Richard Berke wrote:
Another challenge I face with landscapes is when the distant portions are both a little shadowed and hazy blue generally. It’s not an interesting mist or cloud formation across those areas. It’s more angle of the sunlight or partial cloud-induced-shade to the distance. Haze reducing tools with masking seem the right tools to use, but I struggle with the resulting color not looking ‘natural’.
On August 19, 2019 at 10:29 am Bohdan wrote:
I take a ton of pictures of the guys playing softball and mostly in full sun. Every once in a while, I’ll catch a break from the sun and my pictures look really great. But recently cloudy days have been scares. During my raw processing, I find myself having to dim the lights, sort of speak, because the sun just blows out their faces. I cannot move the sun, nor can I move the bleaches the guys are sitting on. During my action shots, I try to move around so that the sun is not directly in front of me. But, there are times I cannot avoid it without missing the shot I want to take. If I meter down the exposure, my pictures come out darker than I want them to be. I use the native ISO (64) on my camera and shutter priority. I’ve tried other modes and ISOs, but never able to get the right mix with the sun being so intense. Any suggestions on how to correct for this?
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