Two Light Set Up
Clamshell is an easy setup you can do with softboxes or umbrellas that will always give you good results. you only need two lights, one as your key, angled above your subject, and the fill light below. Its great for shooting someone who is older because it fills in lines and wrinkles, it can make anyone look good! The key is to keep your main light a little higher power than your fill, here I’ll show you how this effects the image. Source: Youtube


San Pablo City - Coco Festival
The Coconut Festival Street Dancing is a competition among schools within San Pablo City. The competition is divided in three divisions: Elementary, Secondary and the College Divisions. During the early festivals, costumes were 90% made from coconut trees. But later on, it was decided that costumes may not be much from coconut. Also, music used in the early festivals is different. It is more on a tribal beat. Some of the used music/songs in the street dancing were: "Follow th
Balancing Strobes with a setting sun
Want to learn advance technique balancing Strobe Light & Ambient Light, here in this video you will learn how to balance the Strobe light and ambient light (a setting sun). Source: The Slanted Lens/Youtube
The Basics of One Light set up
Here’s a good video from TheSlantedLens that gives some good basic information on how to set up a one light setup. Source: The Slanted Lens/Youtube
Umbrellas 101 Photo &Video Tutorial
Learn how to use different types of umbrellas and Photo umbrellas are cheap, portable and super useful. Which is why you'll want want an umbrella as your first soft light source. There are two general kinds -- the reflected umbrella and the optical white shoot-through umbrella. I strongly prefer the white (shoot-through) version as it is more versatile. In particular, because you can bring it right up next to someone's face for both power and softness. Source: The Slanted Len