Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Workshop - Photographing Water Droplets

18th Meeting

Workshop - Photographing Water Droplets

We had such a great time photographing water droplets tonight. It took us a while to get all set up with 5 cameras of different brands and 5 external flashes, all different brands. Keith did a great job coordinating the flash setup. We tried shooting with the PC sync cord, Nikon CLS, Canon flash and even shooting tethered to a laptop.

Check out a few shots I took. My settings were ISO 800/400 (I changed half way through) f/11 and 1/250s. In my shots, we had four flashes pointing towards the background powered down to about 1/16. I was using the D300 with a 105mm macro lens but you don't need macro to do these although you will probably have to crop the images. These are pretty much straight-out-of-camera (sooc) with just a slight contrast boost. The different colours were achieved by changing the white balance in camera.

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer


Click on over to Strobist for a great lesson on how to photograph water droplets.

Next wednesday we'll be meeting to showcase "CAFE STYLE PHOTOS" for display in our fireside room. Bring up to 4 images for selection that you think will match well in cafe style room.

Here's a tutorial I wrote and cross posted over at Dolce Pics.



focal length: 105 mm
shutter speed: 1/250
aperture: f/11
ISO: 400
flash: fired - 4 speedlights off-camera at 1/16 power each

I love our photo club because we actually get together to shoot and try new types of photography. Inspired by one of our member's water drop shot from the week before, we wanted to try our hand at it too. It turns out that the setup can be very simple but can also get more complicated if you want it to.

For simplicity's sake, I'll just share with you the basic recipe for photographing water drops.

Materials Needed:

  • camera with a macro lens (other lenses will work too)

  • tripod

  • at least one external flash (the more the better)

  • a system to fire the external flash off-camera

  • eye dropper

  • bowl of water

  • colourful or bright backdrop

  • towel

  • an assistant or two





Step-by-step:

  1. Set up your working area. Put your camera on a tripod. Set it up in front of a bowl of water and have something colourful or bright behind the bowl. Your flashes should be placed to shoot at the background and not at the water.

  2. Set your exposure manually. Try f/16, ISO 200, 1/250s to begin and make adjustments as you go. Since you will be relying on your flash to light your subject, you can use a small aperture (for great depth of field), low ISO (for sharpness and greater detail) and a high shutter speed (no faster than your flash sync speed though).

  3. Set your focus manually. If you have live view, here is where you can use it. Use a pen or the dropper and place it in the water approximately where the drops will fall and use that to help you focus. Oh, and make sure your lens is switched to manual focus only.

  4. Figure out how you're going to fire your flashes off-camera. You can use a PC sync cord, Nikon CLS, master on-cam and slave off-cam, pocket wizards (or equivalent) etc. Find out what works for your system.

  5. Set your flash power as low as possible. The higher the flash power, the slower the flash will recycle, which means you can't take shot after shot after shot right away. By having more than one flash you can set them all to the lowest power so they will recycle faster and you can take more frames at a time.

  6. Shoot away! Make adjustments as you go. Adjust the white balance in camera for different colour casts or change the backdrop. Try not to shoot too many frames at once so your flashes have time to rest.





I just changed the white balance to tungsten in-camera to get this blue image.


Simple enough right? That's all it takes to get shots like the ones above. I didn't even do much post processing either. I just boosted the contrast a touch.

For you over-achievers out there, there are many variations to photographing water droplets and can get as complicated as you want to make it. Check out Martin Waugh's Liquid Sculpture portfolio for inspiration.

If you give it a go, please leave a comment. I'd love to see your shots!

1 comments:

Sarah June 17, 2009 at 11:47 PM  

Amazing and beautiful! I'm inspired and missing my camera even more!

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About This Blog

Vancouver, BC
OAC Photo Club, founded in January 2009 is open to anyone interested sharing, learning and honing their photography skills using digital SLR cameras. For more information, please contact oac[at]dolcepics[dot]com.

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