
Martin Evening is a London-based advertising photographer and noted expert in both photography and digital imaging. As a successful photographer, Martin is well known in London for his fashion and beauty work, for which he has won several awards. In 2008, he was inducted into the NAPP Photoshop Hall of Fame.
I shot this image for the cover of my book on Lightroom 3. Previously, the cover images I’d used had been rather dark, so I decided to go to the opposite extreme. The ‘before’ image gives you an idea of the basic lighting that was used. I had a single umbrella above the camera and two lights bounced either side of the subject into polystyrene boards to provide overexposed light hitting the model from slightly behind where she was sitting. I used these same lights to light the backdrop, which was a white wall that I allowed to go to a light grey colour.
The retouching work started in Lightroom, where I chose to add a blue cast and lighten the corners. I retouched this image using the Vignetting Amount slider in the Lens Corrections panel to apply the corner lightening. However, since Lightroom 3 and Camera Raw 6 the Effects panel can be used to apply a more controlled lightening (or darkening) vignette effect. I then used Photoshop for the remaining retouching and added a shadow mask layer to produce the rippled lighting effect seen in the final version.
How to Create High Key Portaits – Step by Step
![]() 1. Here is the original photograph that I started with, which was opened in Camera Raw using the default settings. When shooting in the studio using an Elinchrom flash, I normally have the white balance set to 4700K, which is fairly close to the measured white balance for these particular flash units. In this example, the light-grey backdrop appeared almost completely neutral in colour. |
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Visit Martin’s website http://www.martinevening.com/