The Natural Light Portrait Book: The step-by-step techniques you need to capture amazing photographs like the pros
By Scott Kelby
5/5
()
Photography
Portrait Photography
Camera Settings
Lighting
Lighting Techniques
Mentor
Power of Friendship
Workplace Romance
Revelation
Grateful Protagonist
Ugly Duckling
Loving Family
Historical Background
Mirror
Power of Appearance
Image Editing
Outdoor Photography
Post-Processing
Photoshop
Lightroom
About this ebook
What would your life be like if you could shoot absolutely amazing portraits? If you could be in any natural lighting situation, indoors or out, and know that you’d be able to create an amazing image every time? If you’ve ever dreamed of making such incredible portraits that your friends and family say, “Wait a minute, this is your photo!? You took this?” then you’re in luck.
Award-winning photography book author Scott Kelby teaches you exactly how to shoot and edit gorgeous natural light portraits. Scott shares all his secrets and time-tested techniques, as he discusses everything from his essential go-to portrait gear to camera settings to the portrait photography techniques you need to create absolutely stunning images. From window light to taming harsh outdoor light, from the tools and accessories you need to capture beautiful portraits in any lighting condition, Scott has got you covered.
Among many other topics, you’ll learn:
- • The secrets to getting super-sharp portraits every time without breaking a sweat.
- • Exactly which camera settings work best for natural light portraits (and which ones you should avoid).
- • How to create separation with a silky smooth, out-of-focus background no matter which lens you have.
- • How to tame even the harshest light and turn it to your advantage to create soft, beautiful, wrapping light.
- • Which lenses will get you the best results and why.
- • What gear you need, which accessories work best, and a ton of killer tips that will help you create better images and make the entire experience that much more fun.
It’s all here, including an entire chapter on post-processing and retouching, and another with detailed portrait recipes, and best of all, it’s just one topic per page, so you’ll get straight to the info you need fast. There’s never been a natural light portrait photography book like it!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1: Portrait Lenses
Chapter 2: Camera Settings
Chapter 3: Window Light Portraits
Chapter 4: Shooting Outside
Chapter 5: Shooting in Direct Light
Chapter 6: Composition
Chapter 7: Posing
Chapter 8: Post-Processing
Chapter 9: Portrait Recipes
Scott Kelby
Scott Kelby is an award-winning photographer, author, and post-processing guru. He is Editor and Publisher of Photoshop User magazine and host of the influential weekly photography talk show The Grid. He teaches online courses, live workshops, and seminars around the world. Scott is an award-winning author of more than 100 books, including The Adobe Photoshop Book for Digital Photographers, Photoshop for Lightroom Users, Professional Portrait Retouching Techniques for Photographers Using Photoshop, How Do I Do That In Lightroom?, and his landmark, The Digital Photography Book, which has become the #1 top-selling book ever on digital photography.
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Reviews for The Natural Light Portrait Book
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Practical and entertaining, a to the point summary of techniques for outdoor portraits.
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Book preview
The Natural Light Portrait Book - Scott Kelby
Five Things You Need to Know Up Front . . .
(1) Okay, that headline may be slightly overstating it, but it’s so important that you read these five things that I had to create an attention-getting headline to make certain you did, in fact, read them. Now, what kind of stuff would be so important that if you missed it, it would be bad? Well, if you skipped this, you wouldn’t know that there’s a special webpage with some videos I created just for you that will help you big time. Here’s the link to that webpage: kelbyone.com/books/nlpbook. Now, let’s get on with the other four riveting things (stop snickering).
(2) Here’s how this book works: Basically, it’s you and me together at a shoot, and I’m giving you the same tips, the same advice, and sharing the same techniques I’ve learned over the years from some of the top working pros as I would a friend. When I’m with a friend, I skip all the technical stuff, so for example, if you turned to me and said, Hey Scott, where am I supposed to focus so this portrait is tack sharp?
I wouldn’t give you a lecture about hyperfocal distance or depth of field zones for acceptable sharpness. In real life, I’d just turn to you and say, Aim your focus point on whichever eye is closest to the camera, then hold your shutter button halfway down, lock focus, compose the shot any way you want, and then press the shutter button down all the way.
I’d tell you short and right to the point like that, so that’s pretty much what I do throughout this book.
(3) You don’t have to read this book in order. This is a jump-in-anywhere book, so if there’s a particular area of portrait photography you want to read first, you can just jump to that chapter and dive right in, no sweat. If you’re brand new to all of this, then it would probably be helpful to start up front, because later chapters build on earlier chapters, but you don’t have to read it in order.
To Keep You from Destroying Your Life, or Worse!
(4) If you’re shooting with a Sony, or Olympus, or a Fuji digital camera, don’t let it throw you that a Canon or Nikon camera is often pictured in the book—it’s only because that’s what I had access to. Most of the techniques in this book apply to any DSLR or mirrorless camera, and a bunch of them will even help if you only shoot with your smartphone’s camera. So, don’t let brands, makes, or models throw you off—this is about the bigger picture of portrait photography.
(5) Should you read the intro page to each chapter? I have a tradition in all my books that either delights my readers, or sends them into fits of anger. It’s how I write the introduction to each chapter. In a normal book, these brief intros would give you some important insight into the coming chapter. But, mine . . . um . . . well . . . don’t. These quirky, rambling intros have little, if anything, to do with what’s actually in the chapter. They’re designed to simply be a mental break between chapters, and a lot of folks really love them (so much so, that we actually published a whole book of nothing but chapter intros from my various books. I am not making this up), however some serious type
folks hate them with the passion of a thousand burning suns. Luckily, I’ve relegated the crazy stuff
to just those few intro pages—the rest of the book is just straight-to-the-point stuff. But, I had to warn you just in case you’re a Mr. Grumpypants, and if that sounds like you, I’m begging you, please just skip the chapter intros altogether. Okay, thanks for taking the time to read these two pages, and now you’re ready to launch into this puppy and make the very most of it. Turn the page and let’s get to work!
Chapter One
Portrait Lenses
It All Starts Here
Before we start, it is absolutely imperative that you stop here, go back, and read #5 in the Five Things You Need to Know Up Front . . .
on page xiii. Once you’ve done that, you’re cleared to come back and pick up reading right here. Okay, lenses. They are not cheap! But have you ever stopped to think about why some lenses actually cost more than the camera bodies themselves? I know, right? It’s crazy. Especially since all that’s in a lens is some die-cast machine-engineered aluminum for the barrel, and then some finely ground glass, and it’s probably recycled glass at that. Interesting side note here on the origins of the word lens
: I was surprised to learn that lens
is not a word at all. It was originally an acronym used in the mid-1820s when the Daguerreotype process (considered the first documented successful use of a camera) was invented and the acronym LENS actually stood for Light Emitting Numinous Sphere,
which of course was a reference to the circular glass used in photographic lenses. Although Nicéphore Niépce gets a lot of the credit for creating the first actual working camera, it was his assistant Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre who actually came up with the term LENS. But, perhaps more importantly, it was Daguerre’s Italian confidential secretary, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who not only recorded the historical event, erroneously crediting Niépce with originally coining the term LENS, but some years later she went on to play the character Elaine on Seinfeld, and the rest, as they say, is made up history.
A 70–200mm f/2.8 or f/4 Zoom Lens
This is my #1 go-to lens for natural light portraits, and whether you choose the f/2.8 version or the f/4 version, they are both sharp, flattering lenses (pretty much every lens manufacturer’s 70–200mm is a very solid lens—Sony, Nikon, Canon, Sigma, Tamron). This lens does three great things: (1) It makes people look awesome! When you shoot at its longer focal lengths—for me, I like anywhere from 120mm to 200mm—the lens compression creates a very flattering look for faces. Although I like the 120mm to 200mm range, really anything around 100mm or more will do the trick. Using a longer lens like this is one of the nicest, most flattering things you can do for your subject. (2) Having a wide zoom range like 70–200mm gives you lots of different compositional options without having to move from your shooting position a bunch. (3) By shooting farther back, it makes your subject feel more comfortable—you’re not right on top of them, shooting two feet from their face, like you might wind up doing with a shorter lens. If you’re working with a professional model, it won’t faze them at all that you’re shooting up close like that—they’re used to it. But, if you’re doing a portrait of the vice president of marketing for a company, or a high school student for a senior portrait, having the photographer so close tends to make them uncomfortable, and that’s the last thing you want in a portrait session. One more thing to consider: How much of a difference will you see between an f/2.8 lens and the f/4 version? To the eye? Not much at all, but you’ll feel the difference in your hand (the f/2.8 version weighs a lot more), and in your pocket (it literally costs about twice as much). So, if you don’t shoot in low-light situations often, where that one extra stop of light might make a difference, go with the f/4.
An 85mm f/1.8 Lens
If I’m not shooting my 70–200mm, it’s only because I’m shooting my second go-to lens for portraits: the 85mm f/1.8, which lets you get the background behind your subject even softer and more luscious (there’s a word you don’t get to use every day) thanks to that f/1.8 f-stop. The general rule is: the lower the number, the more out of focus the background will be. Well, if that’s the case, you might be wondering why I’m not using an 85mm f/1.4 or even an f/1.2. It’s because at those super-wide-open f-stops, the depth of field is so shallow (the part that’s in focus is so thin) that it’s easy to take an out-of-focus portrait if you’re not careful. I don’t want to have to be deadly precise, especially since no one is really going to be able to tell the difference whether I used an f/1.8 or an f/1.4. I’ve done side-by-side tests, shooting the same subject at f/1.8 and f/1.4, and nobody could reliably tell me which was shot with which—they’d have to guess and half the time they were wrong. But, it’s not just the be careful when you focus
thing (more on that later in this chapter), it’s the price and weight. A Nikon 85mm f/1.4 costs $1,597 (when I wrote this), but a Nikon 85mm f/1.8 only costs $477 and weighs about a third less. So, it’s less than a third the cost, and it weighs a third less. Just sayin’. One more thing: Everybody kinda needs at least one fast lens
in their kit—that one lens that you can hand-hold in really low-light situations and still get a sharp shot (a fast lens
is any lens that lets you shoot at very low-numbered f-stops, like f/2.8, f/2, f.1/8, f/1.4, or f/1.2). The lower the number, generally, the more expensive the lens, but like the Nikon f/1.8, there are some great deals out there, like the Canon 85mm f/1.8, which is only $369. That’s a pretty darn fast lens at a really great price (well, it’s a great price for a nice lens anyway), and you’ll always have a sharp, fast lens in your bag when you need it.
A Fast 135mm Portrait Lens
You now know that my two go-to lenses for portraits are the 70–200mm f/2.8 and the 85mm f/1.8, but there’s another lens that’s also quite popular with portrait shooters, so I wanted to include it here, as well, even though I don’t use it myself. The 135mm lens is considered by some portrait photographers to be the absolute perfect focal length for portraits, and it’s right in that flattering lens compression range (you don’t see much visible difference in lens compression once you get above 135mm), so for some, it’s just too perfect. The Canon 135mm f/2 is actually a good deal because it’s f/2 (which is awesome for creating soft, creamy backgrounds), but it’s only $999. If you’re a Sony shooter, the Sony 135mm f/1.8 costs twice as much, just over $2,000, so you might want to consider the Sigma Art lens (shown above), which is also f.1/8 and really sharp, but it’s more than $600 cheaper. They make one for Nikon too, for around the same price. Nikon makes their own, but it’s kind of an old-school lens (it looks old school), so for the same price, I think I’d go with the newer Sigma Art lens.
Avoid Wide-Angle Lenses for Most Portraits
If your goal is to make people look their very best, I would tell you what I would tell a friend: avoid wide-angle lenses. They generally create distortion and people’s faces usually don’t look very good when they’re distorted. Plus, if any part of your subject gets near the edges of the image, those parts will get elongated (like the subject’s foot above), so you pretty much have to get your subject right in the center of the frame. That’s why I recommend sticking with telephoto or longer zoom lenses (think at least 85mm or longer) for more flattering results. Now, you might have instances where you need a wide-angle lens, like when you’re doing an environmental portrait where the location is important to the overall picture. For example, if you were shooting a portrait of a NASCAR driver, posing in front of their car, it might be important to the story to include the car, and maybe even the track. So, in that case, you might need to go with a wide-angle lens. You’re doing this knowing that the overall scene and story is as important as the subject, and what you’re giving up in a more flattering rendition of their facial features, you’re getting back in showing an epic and bigger scene that takes it all in. Just remember, as I mentioned,