Dr. Hibret Benjamin is a dentist with a great smile. She was shot here with a single light using a white seamless background. |
We go to various locations for our open Headshot Days. Corporate
Headshot Days locate at company locations where we shoot several employees in a
day. I use seamless because it is most portable. Nine-foot wide rolls allow me to get farther from the
background. I use Savage 66-12 for
Pure White and 20-12 Black. I
have two separate Background Support Stands for each backdrop so I can roll one
up to reveal the other. My favorite is the Westcott
that is 10.5 wide or seven feet wide depending on how many crossbars are used.
For the white background, I only use one light. I use the
largest source I can for a key light. My preferred is an 86” Extreme Silver PLM Umbrella with
diffuser from Paul C Buff. This
is place on a Paul C Buff Einstein
E640 flash unit fired with Cybersync wireless triggers. I like the way this
light wraps around the subject softly filling in the shadows. It also leaves a
beautiful round catch light. For the white shots I usually have the light
straight behind me and directly on the subject.
If I need it, will put a diffused light on the white
background. But I always want to make sure the background is not blown out and
is in the top quadrant of white on the histogram. If you blow it out, pixilation happens around the hair. This
looks extremely unnatural and detracts from the photos. When I process the
photos in retouching, I replace the white background with pure white. So any
white showing through the hair needs to be as white as possible in the original
shot without pixilation.
For the black background, I change the light to make it a
little edgier. I move the key
light off axis to one side by a few feet. I add a gridded rim light from behind
the subject on the opposite side of the key light. Also, I put a light on the
background. I grid this and throw a diffuser on it to make it just bright
enough to create a gradient around the subject. This is especially important if
they are wearing darker colors or have dark hair. It separates them from the
background. When I retouch, I try to even out the black so it goes pretty dark
on the edges. Another tip is to get the subject away from the background so
that it is somewhat out of focus. Paper backgrounds have natural insistencies
that can be attractive if they are out of focus.