I really appreciate how approchable, your videos are, and real, as oppose to staged, scripted, filtered. And you can feel the integrity and humanity in them. I never hesitate to recommend your channel to my photographer friends.
Absolutely true. I feel the same way. And, what a great teacher. He has so much clarity and this helps me to understand the nuances and know-how so easily.
I just gotta say I appreciate work and information that you share. I primarily shoot wildlife and nature. So setting up flashes and stuff is so intimidating to me.
Garages have been the humble beginnings of many great things. Love the simplicity, thoughtfulness, and pragmatism with which you've set this up. And the host-like openness with which you're showing us around.
Right before the pandemic hit I was lucky to have a big gorgeous space to do my shoots. It was great for the action /dancer shots I do often. Nothing is forever and I lost that studio so now Im back to my small space and making that work again. I have access to a bigger space but that means moving so much gear that it isnt worth it plus I have lots of funky accessories and props at my fingertips right here. I even use a small fog machine and it works well...I think better than the spray. Thanks for keeping me inspired about working in a more humble environment! IM happy that you have Square Space. Keep shooting, making videos etc and keep safe from all the variants ...all best from a NYC fan.
A great studio and a great tour. It looks like you have made it work well for you. I'm across the pond from you, but have a similar sized space for a studio, but upstairs in my home, in what had been a 2nd and otherwise unused master bedroom suite. The 8' ceilings are limiting, but the room is 18' X 26' with a walk-in 10' deep closet for gear storage, and I've made use of the upstairs hallway outside the shooting room for the make-up/hair and coffee break area. I have a long finished "attic room" off the hallway for family storage, but I'm also using it for "props". There is also a bathroom with the door to it located behind my camera position in the shooting room. In the shooting room I have six 10' foot wide hanging backdrops, black, white, gray, chroma blue, chroma green, and a pleated light blue backdrop that has a theater curtain look to it. All are on rollers to allow being raised and lowered easily. Because of the crowded conditions, tripods and power cords on the shooting room floor became a serious trip hazard early in this studio build , so I installed 4, soon to be 5 ten ft long pieces of 1 X 1 X 1/4" steel angles running parallel with the backdrops and spaced about 4' apart. These are spaced about 4" down from the ceiling on short lengths of 1/2" steel pipe at each end, with floor flanges threaded on the ends to allow attachment to the ceiling (They are called "Floor Flanges, but in this case, attached upside down to the ceiling. I added Wiremold electrical power strips along both ends of these angles on the ceiling, so I have an electrical outlet on each end of the long angles every 6" all the way to the backdrops. This gives me power within 5' of any light position where I wish to hang a light from these angles or power a light on a light stand below. If I want to place a light somewhere between two of these long angles, I have some shorter 5' long pieces of the same angle that I can bridge between any two of the long angles. I use electrical beam clamps (a tiny version of a C-clamp with 1/4-20 threaded holes) to secure the short angles to the long angles. Bolting two of these beam clamps together allows me to attach one to the lower long angle and the other to the upper crossing short angle. One of these double clamps at each end of the short angles secures them well to the long angles. I modified my light stands by adding 1/4-20 bolts to the bottom end of the main shaft, so that I can use them upside down and threaded into one of the electrician's beam clamps, I then attach a beam clamp to one of the ceiling angles and I hang the lights from these upside down tripods. For stability, the tripod legs can be opened to brace the stand against the ceiling. I still use the lights on floor stands while setting up, until I decide where it needs to be placed. Then I hang it upside down from the ceiling grid on a stand in that position. Doing this has almost completely eliminated the tripod stands and power cords from my studio floor, eliminating most trip hazards, and making it much safer in my studio. My digital Darkroom is behind the camera in the camera left corner of the room on a computer table. The tether cable runs from the camera positon with plenty of slack, up to the ceiling grid and along the electrical conduit to my shooting computer, camera right. My soft boxes that are not in use are hanging on the wall camera left. Along the wall camera right are more computer tables with printers, paper, batteries charging area, and post production computer. This studio space, other than the ceiling height, is working quite well for me, since I'm doing mostly portraits and product work. Standing portraits are difficult in here, but seated is working well. I'm doing both stills and video here. The videos, so far, have been mostly talks and table demonstrations. I just thought you might see something in this description that you might like, but you seem to already be managing quite well. Sorry, other than a few photo posts of my studio on forums, I haven't built a website or made a video of the place, yet. CharleyL
Wow...I would really love more of that sir. Thank you so much for this lovely tutorials it has helped me so much and my love has grown. Prince from Nigeria ❤
Love it, Sean! Love how you have a very modular setup, utilising the whole space, with each corner a specific plan and purpose, how envious! :) Looking forward to your light sculpting explorations in this space..
I will be looking forward to getting some tutorials, but I also enjoy the things you talk about around it. What amazes me most is, how you take your camera from the street straight into the studio. Those worlds are so different, and yet you manage to find a balance of some kind. Mastering different fields can be hard but also very fulfilling. So best of luck with both of it!
I absolutely needed this knowledge a lot more than I thought I did! I just opened my first photography studio and I’ve been scrambling to learn as much as I could, but this video really made things easy for me to understand and helped me feel inspired again. Thank you for sharing this.
Yes Sean 👍🏼 I’d love to see your videos of how you light your subjects and poise people , it would be fantastic. I’ve learned so much from your original one light video. Great work
I really enjoy your honest outlook on photography, it is inspiring. This recent piece is so helpful because you show professional results in a humble setting. Thank you and please keep up the phylosophical angle too. Lisa.
Thank you. I am in the process of making a setup like this. Got an bedroom. I love the use the reflectors. I was considering v-flats. This will work better with the mobile version too. Thanks.
You should make a series called “photography in the garage”. I know you said you’re leaving the portrait studio up permanently, but just as a “UA-cam idea” you test your photographic creativity by limiting yourself to that room and your two lights. Excellent video!
I have a similar setup in my garage and really enjoy going out there and creating new photos. Our instructor gave us the assignment this week of low key and its interesting figuring out how to do that. Thanks for your tips about using light. Hadn't heard that before about distance from subject and diameter of modifier. It's good to see you're amongst friends!
Goodness me Sean, I have watched you since the beginning and this video is the most relaxed I have ever seen you, very good to see. I look forward to seeing more video in the studio. Take care. Paul,,
As ever, you put it so well and make things easy to understand (love the width of beauty dish/distance from subject detail). Really looking forward to you covering portrait sessions in future posts. You are doing a fantastic job: keep it up!
Thanks for sharing it all with us. Looks good! Would love to see more videos on your portrait set-ups. (Since you asked.) Great shots of Simon Baxter and Meg. I've also enjoyed your shots of Durham. It's a photo-worthy city, no? Since you're into things ecclesiastical (as am I) make sure you get over to Welles Cathedral some day. The scissor arch always takes my breath away.
Only just "discovered" your channel Sean and as an amateur photographer really enjoying the portraiture side, I have found your videos useful, interesting and entertaining. The lighting side especially. Please keep them up.
It's great to see so many options for how to set up studio lighting, as well as the use of various backdrops. I am in the middle of painting some custom backdrops for my studio, which affords me the options for materials, paint and effects. Thanks for your useful videos!
Thank you for being a great teacher. I’m just setting up my first portrait studio. We converted a carport. I’ll be looking for more great tips from you.
Awesome video. I have a very similar set up in a garage which has been converted into an office/studio. It's a great space to work. The advice on positioning a softbox the same distance as it's width away from the subject is a real nugget of information. I'm self-taught and still learning tips like this is SO useful.
Would love to hear and see more, I have a usable space of 2.5m², that is shared as a summer house. The ceiling is only 1.8m high so very limited so definitely looking for ideas on how best to use it
Sean, Tom Here in Tampa, Fla Area USA. Your Video on PHoto Studio Space is Outstanding. I am an old man soon to be 83 in June 2023. I am in the process of setting up a Photo Studio in my Lana 9 ft x 17 ft. I gatheed a lot of infor from Your Video. Thank You so very very much intelligent Young Man. I greatly appreciate your time & effort making this Video.
Thank you so much for your video, Sean. Also congratulations on your new garage studio. The idea of publishing more portrait videos is tempting. Yes! Maybe you can include some studio portraits in your next book too? Stay as you are. Best regards from Brussels
Really cool video. Portaits are not my favorites photos to take, but this « simple » installation make me want to try it. I’m not an artificial light photographer, or with a simple installation like yours.
Your ability to explain things is terrific. Thanks for sharing your garage studio with us. Really nice and purposeful set up. My mannequin is named Sophie. She is always available and doesn’t charge for her time lol.
I see this VR recording was done about 2 years ago, I’m 65 and trying my hand at portrait photography now, I have 3 speed lights to play with, you’ve gave me some fantastic inspiration on set ups, but the best bit. Fred the head.
This's great timing for me. Just a couple weeks ago, my son and I started clearing out and organizing our garage for this exact purpose. It's a massive, 2 car garage, and it's full of totes and things full of family members' things, so it's a huge project that's going to take a few months, probably. But, I've been trying to think about how I'll set it up and this's giving me a lot to incorporate in. Thanks much.
Another informative video Sean, love em. I feel truly blessed, we bought a home with a media room. Oh the joy, a ton of room. It was a huge change from the small spare sitting room. For those looking for their own Fred the Head, check out your local ladies hairdressers. I picked up a mannequin head used for training hairdressers. Yes her hair is short but you can't complain for 5 bucks. I call her, Hedy, as in Hedy Lamar.
Another excellent video, Sean. I followed your advice about setting up a portable portrait studio and was so impressed with the results. I'd be very interested for you to do more videos about lighting setups.
I would love to see more videoes on portraits, especially in your garage. I myself have a similar sized room I use for portraits, so it could be fun to see how you get the most out of it. Cheers.
Even when I'm shooting a paid model on location, I like to mention that we may do some garage studio shots, you can tell a lot about their experience and professionalism by their reaction to the term "garage studio". And mine is not even mounted 100% of the time, since I actually park my car in it. Your setup is pretty spot on, congrats.
If you are well-known in your area, then yeah, that may say something about their experience. But I can see how some models may be wary* of going into someone’s garage to take photos, especially if they aren’t familiar with who the photographer is.
@@frankwoodbery2473 Absolutely, they're always welcome to do so. And, I always have an assistant present (he or she depending on the model), to make them feel comfortable. For example also, I will choose a female MUA when shooting female talent.
Another really great video. Very much looking forward to seeing more of your portraiture work in future. The test shots at the end were beautiful, I’d be very keen to see more around how you created some of those moods.
Thats one handsome Simon at 17.30. Like he's auditioning to be the next Bond, in which Bond retires to become a photographer, 'Quantum of Woodland' I think it's called... 😄
That's a great setup Sean, it's amazing that each light and each reflector etc has a purpose, it's a whole learning system before you even pick a camera up. I can imagine so many people getting the lighting wrong, certainly me for one. I suppose you can learn so much and the rest is experience. Brilliant stuff. 👍
Lovely ideas and great inspiration Sean. I’ve been shooting portraits at home for a while and you’ve given me some renewed excitement with your set up!
So much inspiration in such a small space! Thanks so much Sean for sharing your set-up with us and discussing what works for you. It gives me a huge amount of inspiration to do my own.
I really appreciate how approchable, your videos are, and real, as oppose to staged, scripted, filtered. And you can feel the integrity and humanity in them. I never hesitate to recommend your channel to my photographer friends.
Absolutely true. I feel the same way. And, what a great teacher. He has so much clarity and this helps me to understand the nuances and know-how so easily.
Seeing a beautiful portrait of Meg at the very end there made my morning. Thank you.
Love the pic of Meg! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and time.
Megs my favourite shot at the end 😊
I just gotta say I appreciate work and information that you share. I primarily shoot wildlife and nature. So setting up flashes and stuff is so intimidating to me.
Very useful and its always a joy to listen to your calm voice and demeanour.
You are one of the most amazing Mentor that we ever had.
Garages have been the humble beginnings of many great things. Love the simplicity, thoughtfulness, and pragmatism with which you've set this up. And the host-like openness with which you're showing us around.
Glad to see you're making the most of your new environment and living space Sean. I'm sure everything will work out for you. Take care of yourself.
Thanks Grant:)
So happy to see you settled in your new place and the garage studio will work really well.
I’m looking forward to seeing your new portraits.
Thanks Ana:)
I appreciate your videos sooo much. You are a fantastic teacher and I learn so much from each of your videos. Thank you
Sean, many thanks. alway good to watch your videos and glad that you are moving onward and upward.
Right before the pandemic hit I was lucky to have a big gorgeous space to do my shoots. It was great for the action /dancer shots I do often. Nothing is forever and I lost that studio so now Im back to my small space and making that work again. I have access to a bigger space but that means moving so much gear that it isnt worth it plus I have lots of funky accessories and props at my fingertips right here. I even use a small fog machine and it works well...I think better than the spray. Thanks for keeping me inspired about working in a more humble environment! IM happy that you have Square Space. Keep shooting, making videos etc and keep safe from all the variants ...all best from a NYC fan.
A great studio and a great tour. It looks like you have made it work well for you.
I'm across the pond from you, but have a similar sized space for a studio, but upstairs in my home, in what had been a 2nd and otherwise unused master bedroom suite. The 8' ceilings are limiting, but the room is 18' X 26' with a walk-in 10' deep closet for gear storage, and I've made use of the upstairs hallway outside the shooting room for the make-up/hair and coffee break area. I have a long finished "attic room" off the hallway for family storage, but I'm also using it for "props". There is also a bathroom with the door to it located behind my camera position in the shooting room. In the shooting room I have six 10' foot wide hanging backdrops, black, white, gray, chroma blue, chroma green, and a pleated light blue backdrop that has a theater curtain look to it. All are on rollers to allow being raised and lowered easily. Because of the crowded conditions, tripods and power cords on the shooting room floor became a serious trip hazard early in this studio build , so I installed 4, soon to be 5 ten ft long pieces of 1 X 1 X 1/4" steel angles running parallel with the backdrops and spaced about 4' apart. These are spaced about 4" down from the ceiling on short lengths of 1/2" steel pipe at each end, with floor flanges threaded on the ends to allow attachment to the ceiling (They are called "Floor Flanges, but in this case, attached upside down to the ceiling. I added Wiremold electrical power strips along both ends of these angles on the ceiling, so I have an electrical outlet on each end of the long angles every 6" all the way to the backdrops. This gives me power within 5' of any light position where I wish to hang a light from these angles or power a light on a light stand below. If I want to place a light somewhere between two of these long angles, I have some shorter 5' long pieces of the same angle that I can bridge between any two of the long angles. I use electrical beam clamps (a tiny version of a C-clamp with 1/4-20 threaded holes) to secure the short angles to the long angles. Bolting two of these beam clamps together allows me to attach one to the lower long angle and the other to the upper crossing short angle. One of these double clamps at each end of the short angles secures them well to the long angles. I modified my light stands by adding 1/4-20 bolts to the bottom end of the main shaft, so that I can use them upside down and threaded into one of the electrician's beam clamps, I then attach a beam clamp to one of the ceiling angles and I hang the lights from these upside down tripods. For stability, the tripod legs can be opened to brace the stand against the ceiling. I still use the lights on floor stands while setting up, until I decide where it needs to be placed. Then I hang it upside down from the ceiling grid on a stand in that position. Doing this has almost completely eliminated the tripod stands and power cords from my studio floor, eliminating most trip hazards, and making it much safer in my studio. My digital Darkroom is behind the camera in the camera left corner of the room on a computer table. The tether cable runs from the camera positon with plenty of slack, up to the ceiling grid and along the electrical conduit to my shooting computer, camera right. My soft boxes that are not in use are hanging on the wall camera left. Along the wall camera right are more computer tables with printers, paper, batteries charging area, and post production computer. This studio space, other than the ceiling height, is working quite well for me, since I'm doing mostly portraits and product work. Standing portraits are difficult in here, but seated is working well. I'm doing both stills and video here. The videos, so far, have been mostly talks and table demonstrations.
I just thought you might see something in this description that you might like, but you seem to already be managing quite well. Sorry, other than a few photo posts of my studio on forums, I haven't built a website or made a video of the place, yet.
CharleyL
Keep it up! Not enough portraiture tutorials on youtube....so glad to see this type of videotape again!
Wow...I would really love more of that sir.
Thank you so much for this lovely tutorials it has helped me so much and my love has grown.
Prince from Nigeria ❤
Love it, Sean! Love how you have a very modular setup, utilising the whole space, with each corner a specific plan and purpose, how envious! :) Looking forward to your light sculpting explorations in this space..
Thank you for posting. This is very helpful. Yes please post more videos about portraits, including using this setup. Cheers from Canada.
Sean delivers consistently quality content for the price of... nothing. Hit that like my friends, he's earned it and then some.
Thank you Sean. Just starting small studio portrait photography myself so I’m looking forward to learning from you.
I will be looking forward to getting some tutorials, but I also enjoy the things you talk about around it. What amazes me most is, how you take your camera from the street straight into the studio. Those worlds are so different, and yet you manage to find a balance of some kind. Mastering different fields can be hard but also very fulfilling. So best of luck with both of it!
Thank you for sharing the way you do things. Very intelligible and approachable. Thank you!
I absolutely needed this knowledge a lot more than I thought I did! I just opened my first photography studio and I’ve been scrambling to learn as much as I could, but this video really made things easy for me to understand and helped me feel inspired again. Thank you for sharing this.
That's great to hear
Also as did I and I greatly appreciate it.
thats great and almost all one would need for good portraits.
Just wanted to say that we love you, Sean! You are an inspiration in photography and how you approach life! I hope you're doing well. Thank you
Yes, I will wait for the next series of garage portrait photoshoot!
Thank you. Very timely and helpful. Building a home right now that will have an office/studio for my photography. You've given me some ideas.
Yes Sean 👍🏼 I’d love to see your videos of how you light your subjects and poise people , it would be fantastic.
I’ve learned so much from your original one light video. Great work
I am so exited for the new content. The way you explain makes things very clear. Can't wait!
Yeah i would love to see more portrait material, ive been curious about lighting techniques as im a natural light photographer.
What a cool garage photo studio! It’s always enjoyable to learn something new from Sean Tucker.
I love the simplicity of it all
Loved seeing Meg in those test shots 👍
I really enjoy your honest outlook on photography, it is inspiring. This recent piece is so helpful because you show professional results in a humble setting. Thank you and please keep up the phylosophical angle too.
Lisa.
Thanks for the peek into your studio. I too have a small studio and would enjoy seeing you do some shoots.
Thank you.
I am in the process of making a setup like this. Got an bedroom. I love the use the reflectors. I was considering v-flats. This will work better with the mobile version too. Thanks.
You should make a series called “photography in the garage”. I know you said you’re leaving the portrait studio up permanently, but just as a “UA-cam idea” you test your photographic creativity by limiting yourself to that room and your two lights. Excellent video!
I have a similar setup in my garage and really enjoy going out there and creating new photos. Our instructor gave us the assignment this week of low key and its interesting figuring out how to do that. Thanks for your tips about using light. Hadn't heard that before about distance from subject and diameter of modifier. It's good to see you're amongst friends!
Goodness me Sean,
I have watched you since the beginning and this video is the most relaxed I have ever seen you, very good to see. I look forward to seeing more video in the studio.
Take care.
Paul,,
Thanks Paul:)
I feel like your videos help me to remember to stay grounded :) thank you ❤️
Would definitely be interested in more videos on this set up and ways you are using as it evolves. Wish I had a garage!
Great! Thanks a lot Sean. Looking forward to seeing more portrait videos👍
This is just brilliant, the most simplified explanation of studio lighting and modifiers/accessories out there! did I remember to say amazing?
Loved it...
I think you shoud make more videos in portrait photography and it will be so much good for beginers.
As ever, you put it so well and make things easy to understand (love the width of beauty dish/distance from subject detail). Really looking forward to you covering portrait sessions in future posts. You are doing a fantastic job: keep it up!
Good video. You're one of only 4 or 5 UA-camrs I recommend to people starting out in photography.
So well explained - thank you - I look forward to future videos on portrait photography.
Great video. I need to clear my garage and start shooting there again. Would love to see more of what you do in the garage.
Thanks for sharing it all with us. Looks good! Would love to see more videos on your portrait set-ups. (Since you asked.) Great shots of Simon Baxter and Meg. I've also enjoyed your shots of Durham. It's a photo-worthy city, no? Since you're into things ecclesiastical (as am I) make sure you get over to Welles Cathedral some day. The scissor arch always takes my breath away.
Only just "discovered" your channel Sean and as an amateur photographer really enjoying the portraiture side, I have found your videos useful, interesting and entertaining. The lighting side especially. Please keep them up.
This is really great! I love the "keeping it simple."
Great use of a small space for a studio, very affordable as well! I might add a few V-flats as well! Thanks for sharing all of your videos!!!!
Thank you Sean for sharing your highly valuable experience with all of us out there. Greetings from Mexico. Michael
Amazing vid. You just gave me the answers to all of my beginner, building a studio questions.
Keep it the studio content coming. Nice simple setup and easy to mimic for small spaces. Thank you for sharing your craft.
Great video!!!! Even with a portrait of Meg! Thank you for sharing!!!!
It's great to see so many options for how to set up studio lighting, as well as the use of various backdrops. I am in the middle of painting some custom backdrops for my studio, which affords me the options for materials, paint and effects. Thanks for your useful videos!
Thank you for being a great teacher. I’m just setting up my first portrait studio. We converted a carport. I’ll be looking for more great tips from you.
Wishing you all the best. I have a similar single garage setup! Great to see I worked it out similar to yours. Thanks as always
Awesome video. I have a very similar set up in a garage which has been converted into an office/studio. It's a great space to work. The advice on positioning a softbox the same distance as it's width away from the subject is a real nugget of information. I'm self-taught and still learning tips like this is SO useful.
Great video! Lots of good tips for small space. Thanks for sharing your setup
Thanks Sean! This video came on a perfect time for me, I admire you and I like your vision. Keep on rocking!
Thank you, Sir. Extremely informative. Please more of this ilk.
Great video - many thanks! Yes please, more vids on portrait shooting with simple set ups would be really useful!
Thanks again Sean. Would love to see your experiments of lighting in your garage. Cheers.
Would love to hear and see more, I have a usable space of 2.5m², that is shared as a summer house. The ceiling is only 1.8m high so very limited so definitely looking for ideas on how best to use it
Sean, thanks for teaching me a bunch of things today about lighting and photography. Amazing video! Take care 🙂
Great video Sean just shows you how to manipulate any space for portraits learned a lot here ty
Really cool to see how you light a small space. I have been thinking of using my garage in the same way. Thanks for the inspiration Sean
Thanks Sean Looking forward to "Garage Portraits "
Very much looking forward to small home studio portraiture and lighting.
i also have a garage and have been looking forword to turning it into a studio, thank you for the video
Sean, Tom Here in Tampa, Fla Area USA. Your Video on PHoto Studio Space is Outstanding. I am an old man soon to be 83 in June 2023. I am in the process of setting up a Photo Studio in my Lana 9 ft x 17 ft. I gatheed a lot of infor from Your Video. Thank You so very very much intelligent Young Man. I greatly appreciate your time & effort making this Video.
Love this and feel like you are my very own personal mentor! The Gravity backdrop is gorgeous...well worth the $$$$! I am surely going to order one.
Thank you so much for your video, Sean. Also congratulations on your new garage studio. The idea of publishing more portrait videos is tempting. Yes!
Maybe you can include some studio portraits in your next book too?
Stay as you are.
Best regards from Brussels
Really cool video. Portaits are not my favorites photos to take, but this « simple » installation make me want to try it. I’m not an artificial light photographer, or with a simple installation like yours.
Your ability to explain things is terrific. Thanks for sharing your garage studio with us. Really nice and purposeful set up. My mannequin is named Sophie. She is always available and doesn’t charge for her time lol.
What a brilliant idea Sean!
The test shots look fantastic, even Meg got a look in 😎
I see this VR recording was done about 2 years ago, I’m 65 and trying my hand at portrait photography now, I have 3 speed lights to play with, you’ve gave me some fantastic inspiration on set ups, but the best bit. Fred the head.
This's great timing for me. Just a couple weeks ago, my son and I started clearing out and organizing our garage for this exact purpose. It's a massive, 2 car garage, and it's full of totes and things full of family members' things, so it's a huge project that's going to take a few months, probably. But, I've been trying to think about how I'll set it up and this's giving me a lot to incorporate in. Thanks much.
Another informative video Sean, love em. I feel truly blessed, we bought a home with a media room. Oh the joy, a ton of room. It was a huge change from the small spare sitting room. For those looking for their own Fred the Head, check out your local ladies hairdressers. I picked up a mannequin head used for training hairdressers. Yes her hair is short but you can't complain for 5 bucks. I call her, Hedy, as in Hedy Lamar.
Yes, please, to more portrait videos.
Fantastic video as always Sean! And yes I’m interested in your other portraiture ideas
Another excellent video, Sean. I followed your advice about setting up a portable portrait studio and was so impressed with the results. I'd be very interested for you to do more videos about lighting setups.
I would love to see more videoes on portraits, especially in your garage. I myself have a similar sized room I use for portraits, so it could be fun to see how you get the most out of it. Cheers.
Even when I'm shooting a paid model on location, I like to mention that we may do some garage studio shots, you can tell a lot about their experience and professionalism by their reaction to the term "garage studio". And mine is not even mounted 100% of the time, since I actually park my car in it. Your setup is pretty spot on, congrats.
If you are well-known in your area, then yeah, that may say something about their experience. But I can see how some models may be wary* of going into someone’s garage to take photos, especially if they aren’t familiar with who the photographer is.
@@DavidStella - You can also ask the model to bring a friend or family member if they are uncomfortable with a garage studio.
@@DavidStella I think you mean wary. Weary means tired.
@@catnapwat yes, that’s what I meant. Thanks
@@frankwoodbery2473 Absolutely, they're always welcome to do so. And, I always have an assistant present (he or she depending on the model), to make them feel comfortable. For example also, I will choose a female MUA when shooting female talent.
Thata a great simple setup Sean. Well done. I would love to see more portrait videos. I loved the last image of Meg. Thank you.
Another really great video. Very much looking forward to seeing more of your portraiture work in future. The test shots at the end were beautiful, I’d be very keen to see more around how you created some of those moods.
Thats one handsome Simon at 17.30. Like he's auditioning to be the next Bond, in which Bond retires to become a photographer, 'Quantum of Woodland' I think it's called... 😄
Very very VERY interested in more portraiture videos! I learn so much from every upload of yours!
That's a great setup Sean, it's amazing that each light and each reflector etc has a purpose, it's a whole learning system before you even pick a camera up. I can imagine so many people getting the lighting wrong, certainly me for one. I suppose you can learn so much and the rest is experience. Brilliant stuff. 👍
Clear, concise, helpful -- and thank you for the test photos at the end of the talk.
Lovely ideas and great inspiration Sean. I’ve been shooting portraits at home for a while and you’ve given me some renewed excitement with your set up!
So much inspiration in such a small space! Thanks so much Sean for sharing your set-up with us and discussing what works for you. It gives me a huge amount of inspiration to do my own.
Love the very practical studio setup. It will be really interesting watching your videos on putting it into use. Thank you.
Cant wait for future portrait videos!
im definetly interested in more videos on lighting setups
Pretty cool and informative video. Keep posting portrait and lighting work for sure
Would love to see some more videos on lighting, and interested to know how you will heat the space in winter 🙂
Great as always! Looking forward to more portrait video