flyinglentris
Senior Member
I suppose one of the newest tricks to lighting is planning for compositing several shots with different lighting applied.
Yes, it goes against the desire innate in many photographers to get it right the first time, but it is valid as a workflow process and technique. And artistically, it has an open-ended potential for expanding creativity - beyond what is real in a scene. And lets face it, a lot of photography is staged, not serendipitous real world captures. And being staged, posed, rehearsed, etc., reality has already taken an exit.
I can see some benefits and some negatives to compositing lighting, almost immediately.
Certainly, it may be possible to stretch a small amount of lighting gear further by compositing several images, merge in focused lighting on specific areas of a scene, have touch up material readily available to clone in and so forth.
The negatives would be largely in terms of time, time to change setups, time to expend on post-processing, time to plan and time to evaluate. Further, there may be issues aligning shot materials, placement, etc.
Compositing for lighting, is not talked up a lot, not that I have seen, but opinions and experiences are welcome to this thread. Its something new to many photographers who do lighting both in and out of the studio and certainly worth a peek and consideration.
Yes, it goes against the desire innate in many photographers to get it right the first time, but it is valid as a workflow process and technique. And artistically, it has an open-ended potential for expanding creativity - beyond what is real in a scene. And lets face it, a lot of photography is staged, not serendipitous real world captures. And being staged, posed, rehearsed, etc., reality has already taken an exit.
I can see some benefits and some negatives to compositing lighting, almost immediately.
Certainly, it may be possible to stretch a small amount of lighting gear further by compositing several images, merge in focused lighting on specific areas of a scene, have touch up material readily available to clone in and so forth.
The negatives would be largely in terms of time, time to change setups, time to expend on post-processing, time to plan and time to evaluate. Further, there may be issues aligning shot materials, placement, etc.
Compositing for lighting, is not talked up a lot, not that I have seen, but opinions and experiences are welcome to this thread. Its something new to many photographers who do lighting both in and out of the studio and certainly worth a peek and consideration.
