this post was submitted on 29 Nov 2023
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I am going to shoot an evening parade with Christmas trees and Santa and the like. Do you have any helpful tips?

I have a 50 1.2 and an 85 1.2 , 70-200mm 2.8 and a wide angle which I am going to bring. I have other lenses.

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[–] LightpointSoftware@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (3 children)

Thanks for the reply,

I asked the client what their expectations are. They just want shots the can put in the local paper. I could not get more specifics other than "journalistic shots"

I am familiar with the location, just not at night. I am going there tonight to take test shots.

I have the wider lenses for the Christmas tree and people around it and establish shots. There will be some time before sunset that I can use the longer lenses.

Your tips on composition are great! If I use brightly lit backgrounds, I can use the flash to fill in the faces.

I will definitely prioritize the light! A well lit picture is worth a thousand poorly lit ones. I will look for that tonight when I am there for a scene eval.

Fortunately, it should not get colder than 45 degrees

Thank you so much! There is enough here I need to read it multiple times to get it all.

[–] shootdrawwrite@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Journalistic shots = a clear and obvious subject/center of interest, bold compositions, peak action (the most demonstrative moment of a movement or gesture), a story (juxtaposition of subject and scene, what's happening and the people experiencing what's happening; people interacting, emotions, reactions).

Newspapers don't like printing too much black or high contrast, try to keep your shots bright and balanced in terms of exposure across the frame, or snap a brighter alternative to a must-have but dark shot.

As it's for a newspaper that deprioritizes single candids/portraits, they want more of a story--unless it literally is the story, like the mayor or a participant, or if they are themselves a story, like a local celebrity.

Look at similar events from past editions if you can, to see what kinds of pictures they ran.

Really try to avoid providing the client with any previews on the spot if asked, they may just want to know if you got a particular shot, if you did, describe it and reassure them that you got it. Maybe that's just me.

Formally end the coverage with your handler/contact if they are on site, find them or call them (not text) and say thanks, do you need anything else, so they know you're done or in case they have any last minute requests. If they are not on site I usually shoot an (time-stamped) email or text to say I'm done. I do not ask if they need anything else if text is the only way to communicate.

[–] LightpointSoftware@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Thank you so much! That helps a lot.

I don’t have many options for the part of the parade that happens after sunset. I just went to the site at the time I am supposed to shoot and it was very dark. Hardly any light. No street lights, just some Christmas lights wrapped around some trees.

I am going to go much earlier to capture as much as I can when there is available light.

I saw similar events from the paper and they were all earlier in the day.

I won’t provide previews. I just have a deadline, which I can easily meet.

They are on site, so it is a great idea to tell them I have finished and if they want anything more.

They did say they want close ups of people, but they did not say anyone specific. Just people I find interesting. That is one of my strengths.

[–] shootdrawwrite@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Whenever you can, get different angles, different framing tight to wide, landscape and portrait, of the same scene/subject, work it thoroughly to give your client options. Frame a little loose for flexibility in cropping.

If some of the event is during daytime definitely get all you can then, it sounds like it might be a challenge to get good stuff after dark, but the parade itself might provide something you can work with.

If you have to use flash, try off camera with a cord or wireless, held as far away from the camera as you can reach either above or at 45 degrees or to the side and pointed back at the subject, whatever makes sense, always higher than their nose (nose shadow should always go at least slightly downward, never up).