Had a great, great, great time here in Columbus. I love this town. Thank you Buckeyes for being so warm and hospitable. Can’t wait to come back!
This is one from the workshop today. This was shot in a parking lot. Nikon SB something or another flash (a 25 or an 800 I don’t remember which) and the Westcott 50″ Apollo softbox.
I’m beat. I hope my 365 tomorrow is one of my bed side clock on my table showing me that I slept past checkout time. :)
Cheers,
Zack
19 Comments
Great shot Zack.
I really love your use of the wescot+SB’s!
PEACE
Awesome shot!
I’m really enjoying your 365 so far, Zack.
Looking forward to see your work back in Atlanta!
~Eugene
One of my favorite shots from today. Thank you again for a wonderfully life changing workshop. My photography will never be the same!!!
Awesome. Dude, you never cease to amaze me. Such an inspiration. Now, go get some rest. Worry about tomorrow’s shot tomorrow. =D
great shot. ever thought about coming up to cleveland?
Love the colours in this! Go and get some sleep! Looking forward the next shot! Thanks, Ben
nice zack . i like this one
“Worry about tomorrow’s shot tomorrow”
Good advice! =)
Awesome framing
and I hope that your image today isn’t the view of the CMH airport – of you being stuck in Columbus, OH. We loved having you here!
Love the shot – loved watching you work. And thanks 1,000,000 for working with our students!
LOVE the light quality, and from just one Speedlight. Dang, I gotta get an Apollo softbox. Have a great weekend!
Thank you Zack for coming to Ohio!
I learned so much from watching you work.
You are a gift to the photography industry.
Best of luck getting out of ohio with the snow.
-kim
Super nice. Great light placement and pose and ambient light. Impressed she did this outside. Had to be in the teens.
Really NICE Zack! Do you remember what power setting you had the flash on? I’m curious to see if you needed full power with the large softbox or if it was really low like 1/128th or something in between. Thanks for posting this excellent shot!
I want to say it was 1/4 power.
Thanks Zack for the info. Do you know how 1/4 power on say a Nikon speedlight compares to the power settings on an Alien Bee B1600? What I mean is, at full power on the Nikon what does it equate to on the Alien Bee? Also, at the same flash to subject distance, what is the lowest equivelant that you can reach with a Nikon SB-800/900 with the lowest power setting on the alien bee? In layman’s terms, at what point do the power levels generally meet to where lower power is needed from say a 4 AA powered flash unit such as an SB-800/900? You rock Zack, thanks for the info!
Chris – I can’t answer your question right now because I’ve never metered them but I will and will report back to you.
Thank you! We’re getting snowed in up here in New Jersey right now, BTW… :-)
classic arias.