Started posting a noir series over at
Instagram. This was the leadoff pic, and there were some questions about the lighting, which is really pretty simple. We shot at
The Blue Bar at the Algonquin Hotel, a truly historic property in Manhattan. Legend has it that the actor John Barrymore, who lived at the hotel when he was performing on Broadway, felt that people looked better in blue light. Out of deference to one of their most famous regular guests, they made the bar glow blue, and it has remained so to this day.
First move: spike the camera and establish a point of view. Move furniture to simplify the scene. Work with the subject to establish gesture, and size things up, compositionally. Of course here, definitely breaking the time-honored rule of thirds mandate by bullseye-ing my subject. Tripod/ball head combo is our go to, heavy duty
Gitzo, fitted with the new
Gitzo Series 3 quick release ball head. In a scene like this, the tripod is essential. Gotta keep those lines straight.
Working radio TTL here, with SB-5000 Speedlights, so no line of sight considerations. Main light overhead is the Lastolite
EzyBox Soft box, fitted with an egg crate. This is the box with the white interior, which I helped Lastolite design. In a scene like this, with controlled, smallish light sources, I really think the creamier aspects of the white box are an advantage over the standard silver. Also, see the black paper looped over the leading edge of the box, on the subject side of the light shaper? That, oddly enough, is a very key thing for the scene. It blocks the flash from potentially hitting the reflective beading and prevents my light from interrupting the continuous blue flow of the wall.
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Joe McNally Photography[/caption]With just the overhead firing, the scene could look like this, in B&W.
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Joe McNally Photography[/caption]But, you don’t light a beautiful lady the same way you would light a hit man. For the lovely Laeticia, I filled from below with another SB-5000, fitted with a snooted grid, attached by a Justin Clamp. This produces a little beauty pop into her face and makes her light up, but in very controlled, confined way. This bar is not the place to drag out big Octas, etc. It’s a place for small controlled light.
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Joe McNally Photography[/caption]For the technically minded, the final, color image of our mysterious lady is in a daylight white balance, @ 1/15th of a second @ f5.6, ISO 200. Flashes are radio controlled, with the overhead being between a stop to two stops brighter than the little splash of fill. The C-stands are by Avenger. Two lights, controlled from the camera. Once the lights are set up, I never have to leave camera to achieve a desirable ratio.
Many thanks to
Sam Brown styling,
Deborah Englesman for makeup,
Laeticia Harrison Roberts for her elegant look in front of the camera, and of course
Lynn DelMastro, who produced the whole job.
More tk….