Campfire Yells
special thanks for bkaldorf Pittsburgh, (US) & N.S.Silwa
To start the new year off I figured I’d do another beginning to
 end post on a recent personal project I completed.  As visual 
communicators, I think it is incredibly important to hone your vision 
through the use of personal projects.  After all, if you don’t exercise 
your vision how can you expect to obtain stellar results on your clients
 work?
Step 1.  Initial sketch.
I always begin with a very rudimentary sketch of what it is I’m 
trying to accomplish.  In the immortal words of Doc Brown, “Please 
excuse the crudity of this model, I didn’t have time to build it to 
scale or to paint it.”
Concept sketch for the camfire stories photoshoot
I know, I’m a regular picasso right?  Anywho, from here I start 
fleshing out the particulars; models, lighting, wardrobe etc.  For this 
particular project I had people already in mind, so it was just a matter
 of convincing them that they wanted to do it:)  Luckily I have 
wonderful friends who like to see my imagination come to life so they 
were more than willing to help me out.  The biggest problem was going to
 be the location.  I wasn’t keen on carting my entire studio setup out 
to the middle of a campsite, so I decided to bring the campsite to the 
studio.  It was a full day of prep work to build the site, but it was 
totally worth it.  This way I had complete control of the lighting and 
the models would be much more comfortable (being that it was already the
 middle of October in the north east).  The only thing that I wasn’t 
able to replicate in the studio would be the background, that would have
 to be photographed outside at a later date.
The lighting for this shot was somewhat complex.  I really needed 
to replicate the glow of the campfire as much as possible without being 
overly lit.  We ended up going with 8 lights, all of them gelled with 
various orange and yellow mylar.  The lights on the two boys were up 
high and at 45 degree angle while our scout leader was lit from a strobe
 hidden in the campfire.  the highlights were created by two low strobes
 on either side, which were flagged.  The whole scene was then bathed in
 fill light with a magnum reflector.
lighting diagram for campfire setup
The studio shoot itself went off without a hitch.  The background was
 kept dark so I had an easy time punching it out from the foreground.  
That way I could just pop in the correct background at a later date.
image before knocking out the background
From here it was just a matter of photographing the background on 
location and popping it in.  I chose a spot in a local park that kinda 
fit the mood of what I was after.  From here I just waited for the right
 time of day, set up two strobes, and fired away.
background shot, park near my studio
Once I combined the two images together, it was just a simple 
matter of my regular post production set up along with adding all of the
 eyes digitally (I took a bunch of photos of my cats eyes!) and voila, 
the final image!
finished campfire stories image

 
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