November 2017
Beginner to intermediate
208 pages
5h 11m
English

This is a really popular look today (you see it a lot in commercial portraits), and the interesting thing about it is that the main lights that light your subject are behind them, and the front flash is for filling in what the back lights don’t cover. Here’s the setup: (1) Place a flash at a 45° angle (or so) behind and on either side of your subject. Each flash lights one side of your subject, including their hair and the sides of their face, and creates a rim light going down their body. This should be bright, punchy light, but to avoid creating lens flare (since the flashes are aiming forward to some extent), you’ll ...
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