Photography

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OLPC Tips Here & There

Document Owner:
William Stelzer

Document Name
Bill's OLPC Deployment Photo Tips

Revision Date:
11 - 18 - 2011

Category 1:
Category:Photography

Revision User: Mafe


Bill's OLPC Deployment Photo Tips

Using professional techniques to bring back professional looking stills and video from your deployments by William Stelzer

Bill's Message

Here's those notes I promised - sorry it's a bit late! Posting it in the Dropbox as well. Keep in mind it's an ongoing document so if anybody else has ideas and techniques they'd like to add and share, feel free!

The Language of Cinema

It’s important to get a wide array of shots to fully capture what’s going on. Although at first this seems to apply just to it also key to shooting stills as well. There is a language of cinema, of wides, mediums and closeups, that each tell a story in their own different way. Just as important as getting a wide variety of each is knowing the strengths and what to watch out for with each.

Wide Angle

Gets an overall sense of the scene. Also widens the space within the photo. what’s close will appear larger, what’s further away will appear smaller.

Walking with the camera - Low light situations - getting close to sound (for video)
Watch out for - Distortion - Cluttered frame - Boringness

Medium Shot

Features what’s most important:

Great For - Most natural rendition of people - 50mm to 85mm
Watch out for - Forgetting about wides and closeups!

Telephoto

Draws attention to details. Also compresses the space within the photo, making everything appear closer together.

Great For - Isolating telling characteristics of the scene - shallow depth of field - artistic shots
Watch out for - Harder to hold steady - Needs more light - Being further from the sound (for video)

Also pay close attention to the angle at which you are shooting. When shooting kids you should almost always have the camera near level to them. Shooting them from above tends to minimizes their story. Also if you get the camera below someone and shoot up it will make them look epic.

Camera Settings Set-up

ALWAYS use the highest pixel count and quality setting. Gives you more flexibility to crop and do adjustments on the computer later. Use the lowest ISO you can get away with. Less noise equals sharper detail. NEVER use the in camera special effects modes, BW, sepia,Can get much better results in post when you start with a color image.

White Balance

This is your color! If the Auto setting works, great. If it’s not working then you’ll need to switch over to one of the presets or manual white balance. The Cloudy or setting will give warmer light for outdoor shooting - or interiors lit only by sun. Often it’s favorite to shoot with in the field. Manual white balance usually best for classrooms with mixed lighting. Also try cycling through the preset options to see that looks interesting.

Exposure

Auto Exposure works best in perfect conditions. Of course some of the best photographs come out of difficult lighting conditions. When shooting in darker environments you may need to switch to manual. The camera always wants faces to be a certain level of luminance. But if it doesn’t know that what you are shooting is supposed to be dark, it may raise the exposure and ISO automatically, resulting in excessive noise and blown out highlights. This never looks good.