Andriy Zolotoiy Photography Blog

Occasional writings from Toronto photographer

Archive for August, 2010

Aug-25-2010

Perfection

bms_20100824_173322_40556 Top grade bison burger meat, home made bun, Swiss cheese and veggies from backyard. Gulp!

Posted under food photography
Aug-24-2010

International Photography Award Winners Announced

A lot of cool photography this year, check it out here. Truthfully yours scored two honorable mentions in fashion and music pro categories. Thank you everybody who helped to create that imagery! We always have mixed feelings about any sorts of contests but I guess those feelings get warmer when your work gets mentioned in good light.

IPA2010

Posted under photography
Aug-20-2010

I want to ride my bicycle

It’s been exactly one year since my bestest friend Iggy started cycling on regular basic, and so we did “anniversary” photoshoot in a park near my house. Shooting in the midday sun, overpowering it with two AB800s, sync at max and aperture goes all the way to f/18-f/22.

Iggy_20100819_070248_35765 Iggy_20100819_070703_35771 Iggy_20100819_071202_35779

Next part is action shots. Much tougher, since shutter had to be slowed down to 1/60sec to get proper blur effect. ABs are not exactly fast strobes, and stopping action is not easy with them but we’ve managed to get couple of good shots.

Iggy_20100819_073234_35829 Iggy_20100819_073354_35830

Posted under sports photography
Aug-15-2010

Home made cookies

You wake up in the morning because of strong incredible smell of fresh made cookies. It’s beginning of a one good day.

 cookies_20100814_163558_35662 cookies_20100814_165106_35699

Posted under food photography
Aug-13-2010

Shooting fashion with just natural light

Fashion photography is mostly associated with large setups – lots of lighting gear, power packs, assistants running around, etc. While, if theme allows, it is possible to create good fashion photos with just a camera, nothing else. Your setup time will be close to zero and you’ll be shooting very fast. Important part of such shoot is to choose location properly. Soft light in the shade is probably the easiest to work with.

Camera settings. Set white balance to either Cloudy or Shade depending on the mood you want to achieve and ambient light temperature. Note that Shade setting will produce warmer images. Set camera into Aperture Priority mode, Spot metering and choose single focusing point. Setting camera this way will allow you to base your exposure on face skin tone of your model, though you might need to correct it with Exposure Compensation dial depending on the desired mood. Always put your focus point on model’s face, eye preferably. Set aperture for your liking, I prefer to have it open wide to blur the background.

Following images were shot with Nikon D700, 50/1.8 lens at f/2.8. Shutter speed was chosen by the camera depending on available light.

 rachel_20100802_150001_34298rachel_20100802_142345_34178 rachel_20100802_151130_34347

Posted under fashion photography, Toronto
Aug-5-2010

Up for something sweet?

I love food photography as much as I love shooting people, and while some might consider all still life shooting a simpler form of photography it is not always the case. Dealing with the items that melt or loose their shine puts quite a pressure on photographer as you need to set your exposure and composition, and watch that your main subject isn’t “dead” yet. Still, all of the process brings anticipation and excitement if you get some good shots.

Here are few yummy cakes (which were consumed afterwards :) ) I shot recently for a small bakery in Toronto. Used 100mm macro lens, 2 speedlights with 15×15 Alzo softbox, and 5×7 LumiQuest Softbox II. I prefer strobist shooting style for food photography as I can really dial down the speedlights and they still produce plenty of light at 1/8 – 1/16 levels. At those levels I can use flashes almost all day long on single battery charge, though I would always have spares in my bag.

cakes_20100801_114645_0022 cakes_20100801_133355_0073 cakes_20100801_140425_0094

Posted under food photography