11.14.2022

Prepping for tomorrow's shoot, and the shoot the next day and the shoot on Thursday. Hmmmm. A lot to keep track of...

Tethering for the hell of it. 
"How collaborative!" 

 We're photographing small, metal, medical products tomorrow. The kind you need a good macro lens to do right. We'll also be shooting some products that have fine catheters/wires that will need to show up when the images are dropped out against white. On Wednesday we're photographing the models we've been casting over the last two weeks. They'll be dressed in scrubs and will play the roles of medical pros, even to the point of inserting stuff into dummy cadavers (no. not real dead people!). The two shooting days are for the same client but could not be more different. One with intensely small products and in the quiet studio. The other with models and make-up and big locations. Oh boy.

After much research and playing around I've decided to shoot the products (day one) with a camera that tethers to my MacBook Pro laptop. I've spent a lot of time working with the Lumix Tether software in the last week and it is exactly what I need on a couple levels. It's rock solid running on the MacBook Pro. It's a slim program that seems very efficient. It loads Panasonic raw files very quickly. It will allow me to write files to either the Laptop, or the in-camera cards, or to both. In fact, I think it will allow me to set up the two in-camera cards to record simulaneously, backing each other up, and still write to a folder on the laptop. So, a three way back up while shooting. 

I looked at the demo version of Capture One rev. 23 but it only allows for file ingestion into its mysterious folders and not to two sources at once. Remember all those folks who were screaming and crying about only getting a single card slot on their cameras? Why doesn't the same emotion hold true for tethered images? Just curious...

I'm using the Sigma 70mm f2.8 macro Art lens as my primary product lens. I have an older Nikon 105mm f2.8 macro lens sitting in the drawer as a back-up. It's a nice lens as well. Maybe not quite as capable of the detail the Sigma can capture but it's close. 

The Leica software for tethering that I could find is a bust and the plug-in they made back in 2019 for Lightroom of that age doesn't play well with the current version of Lightroom. I could use one of the Leicas with Capture One but it's just rudimentary support with no live view and very little control of the camera itself. Not that it matters much since I would use the same lens on the Leicas...

Instead I am using the Panasonic S5. Twenty four megapixels from a really good sensor is more than enough resolution and the camera, like the tethering software, is rock solid. I used the Panasonic S5 a lot in the last ten days and I feel right at home with it right now. That counts for a lot. I've got two fast SD cards in the S5 and the computer I'm tethering to has a 1TB SSD that's pretty spiffy. It's wired together with USB 3.1 so I can't think that I'll be waiting much for images to pop up. And that's wonderful. I remember tethering with the ancient Kodak DCS760 C cameras and a G4 laptop and you could take a coffee break waiting for files to wend their way across a SCSI connection. And by the time they did you'd need to change the camera battery again. Ah, those were the days when pure persistence in the face of crappy technology really was the main thing that separated professionals from wannabes. 

Since we're shooting in my studio tomorrow there are lots and lots of cameras sitting around just in case something craps out. My secondary/failsafe set up is to press the Leica SL2 into service along with an Atomos Sumo monitor hooked together with a stout HDMI cable. It's a fast set up as well and will give us more than enough clarity to assure everyone that the composition and basic exposures are on the money. 

I wish that Sigma made tethering software for the Sigma fp because it would be nice to sub that camera in for a set of files for a direct comparison to the images from the S5. If you read this and you know that Sigma snuck in some tethering software that I couldn't find, please let me know right away!!! Such a nice camera. Even if you are only using it for color shots. 

Lighting for the products tomorrow? I'm using two NanLite LED units. One is a 300 and the other is a 200. If we need additional sources we've got three Godox SL60s on one shelf and two Godox SL150ii lights on another. I'm blasting them into fairly small soft boxes since our products are pretty small to begin with. 

For the still life stuff we can shoot at ISO 100 and f16 all day long. If we don't need the depth of field we'll drop down to f11 and try to avoid diffraction effects. Works for me. And triggering the camera from the laptop eliminates a major source of camera shake. 

I'm now officially set for tomorrow's shoot. I've cleaned the guest bathroom, gotten the old Krups coffee maker polished up, bought snacks (both healthy and naughty) and we're in good shape. 

After the shoot tomorrow I'll repack for Wednesday. I have an assistant who just came back from working for a few years in NYC. Up in the city they tend to make every shoot a huge production with lots of entourage. And, it seems from our chat, that most people are still shooting with flash... Commercial photography theater.

After our chat I had a bit of trepidation. Models on location. In a medical/tech environment. Should I be shooting with strobes as well? I pulled out the two big 400 watt, plug-in-the-wall monolights and the three Godox AD200 Pro lights and gave it all a good, long thought. After playing with both sets of lights and also messing around with the LEDs I decided to go continuous. Somebody made a really good case for LEDs about a decade ago in a book. Seemed to make sense then. More so now. 

Assist arrives at my place early on Wednesday to help pack up the car and then we head down the road to the client's offices. I dropped by the client's campus this afternoon to do a quick scouting and the place is fantastic. We've got our choice of a 6000 square foot meeting room AND two high tech medical test labs. 

We'll meet up with the client and the make-up artist at 8:30 and start our set up. The talent starts arriving at 9:00. I'm sure the assistant will be surprised by the way I mostly operate, which is a bit eccentric. I dislike working with big crews, never have a digital tech on site (since cameras and laptops are pretty easy to parse these days), and I have my own way of lighting stuff and working with talent. I hope the assist is able to chill out, relax and go with the flow. I never like a shoot to be harder than it needs to be. 

I had a "Merry Christmas!" moment today during the scouting. The client is going to handle the hard parts of the post processing. I get to edit down the files, color correct them and correct for density, etc. and then hand over 16 bit .PSD files which the client will take and do the drop outs/selections/clipping paths and incorporate our images into their backgrounds. It's like a really nice gift. I should remember to send a "Thank You" card. 

The camera package for this day will be similar to the one in the studio. I'll use the S5 and the MacBook Pro but I'm changing lenses to the Leica 24-90mm because it did a beautiful job at the end of last month when we were making environmental portraits for the accounting firm. The back-up/emergency cam will remain the Leica SL2 and the Sumo and I'll bring along the Panasonic 24-105mm zoom for my just in case the Leica lens dies back-up.

Four of the big, beefy LED lights for most of the lighting and a couple smaller ones for accents. I'm eschewing soft boxes in favor of big and medium sized umbrellas mostly just to do something different and tangibly retro with my light. The 200 and 300 series Nanlites will do great bouncing off the ceilings but I do like some directional quality to my main light...

The big tragedy for tomorrow and Wednesday is that I will miss my swim practice on both days. Can't be helped. Well, I guess it could be helped if I just turn down jobs that start before ten a.m. But I was so excited to get this job that I just couldn't pass it up. Nice art director, great budget, fun stuff. 

I'm excited about having a real assistant to help me pack it all up at the end of the day and help me drag all the lighting stuff back into the studio. I'll make sure the files are all backed up from both days before I hit the rack on Wednesday night and the gear will sit on the floor in the middle of the studio until such a time as I am motivated to mess with it. If ever. 

Thursday is a completely different style of photography and a very, very familiar one at that. In the morning I'm photographing two employees of Texas Appleseed which is a non-profit, legal defense organization trying to make the laws in Texas less brutal and regressive. Things like oversight on zany payday loans. Battling the school-to-prison pipeline in underserved neighborhoods, issues surrounding educational equality. We've been doing their portraits in the same outdoor spot for the last ten or fifteen years. No big set up. Just a light on a stand with a small soft box and maybe a "cutter" to block sun from hitting my subjects directly. 

That's the warm-up shoot because later in the day we go to the Four Seasons Hotel for Texas Appleseed's big, yearly fundraising gala. I have shot this event for the past 22 years. This will be year #23. 

It's an old school event. During the VIP reception and the following general reception I'll use a flash on camera and try to get as many posed mini-groups, couples, quad-person shots, etc. as humanly possible. I'm not shy and I probably know about half the people who will be attending from seeing them in years past. The head count is around 450 and at $10,000 a table plus a wild live auction the non-profit should do well. 

I'm also tasked with photographing all the speakers and award winners as well as any surprise entertainment. 

I haven't decided on which camera yet but I do know that I'm planning to use those zany, silly, eccentric Godox Lux Senior flashes. The ones with the retro, fold out, circular reflectors. I'll pack a conventional TTL flash though, just in case. It's typically a fun evening in which I get to circulate non-stop and shoot whatever I want. Making photographs of anyone I find interesting but also getting the images I know the client needs for future fund-raising. 

The Four Seasons Hotel are experts at cooking up wonderful food, even if they are doing it for nearly 500 people at a time. I always enjoy the dinner and the wine pairings are always a step above those at lesser galas. I can't wait. It should be another fun evening and a chance to give some lucky camera, lens and flash a really good, concentrated workout. After I finish up the gala pix I'm off the clock for the entire week of Thanksgiving. Already planning a small out and back trip somewhere just to ....... take a few images with one of my cameras. Thinking pointedly about making it back to San Angelo to see what it looks like in November. I keep seeing stuff from the art scene there and I'm always impressed. 

I've got a fair amount on my plate right now so don't worry if it takes me a little longer to moderate comments or to disagree with misguided commenters. You're not that lucky yet. I will be back

A list of cameras I am interested in right now: 

Leica is having a promotion right now for former customers. $1300 off the price of either a Leica SL2 or an SL2-S. I tried to buy an SL2-S today after I found the sale (announced by Leica this morning) but they were already sold out of that model. I'll keep trying. I can replace my older SL bodies with two of these....

The Sigma fpL keeps bubbling up to the top of my acquisitive consciousness. Don't know why but I thought I should give one a try considering how much I've enjoyed the basic Sigma fp.

Prices are dropping on Panasonic S5s. I logged onto B&H today and tossed a $1697 priced S5 into my cart and it automatically included the (really quite good) 50mm f1.8 into the cart for free. That's a $450 lens which, if you need the lens, makes the actual price of the S5 (which is a great camera) about $1247, brand new. 

Hell of a deal for someone. I bought my S5 from the local store and cajoled a couple extra batteries from them. The free lens would have been an even sweeter deal. 

Finally, I am interested in trying out the Nikon Z6ii. A friend bought one on a whim, along with the 50mm f1.8 and he's been raving about the color and overall image quality. 

If you have experience with that camera I'd love to hear about it.


Well, it seems from my current schedule that I have not yet been able to convince myself to retire. That's okay, the cash will come in handy if anyone gets stuff back in stock.


13 comments:

Will said...

I have a D850 but I bought the Z6II for its size and weight, for use on walks or travel. It's the camera I reach for now. The 50 is in a different league if you like crisp and sharp.

Check Thom Hogan's review if you haven't already seen it.

Anonymous said...

Kirk, I love these posts. I get to experience being a pro photographer, living vicariously through you! I’d love to be able to rent an S5 or Leica to test them out and see their colour but unfortunately they aren’t available. I occasionally get to rent out used equipment from the local store but these never come up.I document Streetart and Graffiti and have found that I enjoy using and prefer the colour reproduction of the 3rd gen+ Sony models. I did have an episode of GAS and tried the Nikon Z6 ii while documenting a festival one weekend and although the camera was nice to use I didn’t find the colours to my liking. I guess when my current Sony gives up the ghost I’ll just purchase whichever current model is available. Good luck with your upcoming jobs.

Andrew

adam said...

I don't know if the fp has any kind of webcam mode or software but might be a substitute for tethering if it does (the monitor might be as good in that case)

panny seem to have the free 50mm with the s5 most of the time in the uk (and probably also the whole EU), they dabbled with a free 35mm and 24mm at various times over summer, and they often have a £200 discount or cashback on top, it's pretty much their most discounted camera here - it's times like this I remind myself that they're a big consumer electronics company, they even make their own resistors and caps so may be more insulated from supply issues than most, fuji for instance discontinued several things because they need the sensors for the x100v I'm presuming, which has suddenly become fashionable on tiktok apparently, and also need to use the fab capacity they can get to make their current gen sensors, and it does have the effect of funneling people to their current line-up, seems to be very clearly differentiated now, they've got the stacked sensor xh2, then the 40mp one, then the x-t5 which doesn't have a battery grip and doesn't shoot 8k, seems like the higher end x-h2 might be losing out already, I've already been offered one at 10% off and the used prices seem low, at least 20% off, seems people prefer more megapixels and a lower price...

adam said...

incidentally panny have a free 2 day loan scheme for s5's etc in the UK and probably EU wide, I think you need to tell them about your project it might not be a totally unconditional loan

Mitch said...

Z6II:

My gateway from DSLR into the Nikon mirrorless ecosystem. Lots to like. Slammed the brakes onto fully moving over. There are circumstances where it doesn't go out on jobs.

30K frames with it. Aggressive settings adjusting and readjusting:

Nice color.

Terrible startup lagginess. If it goes to sleep, it's an eternity to wake back up. D750 on my shoulder, touch shutter button as I raise it to my eye and it is ready. With the Z I'm looking at a blank camera for several-chimpanzees.

Battery hog. Aren't they all?

Native Z lenses are very well corrected (in camera trickery for some but results are results). And very sharp. Love the 24-120 as an all purpose one lens solution sometimes. Always liked Nikon's 1.8 offerings, which have continued in the Z line, as opposed to only wanting the big "professional" 1.4's

Unacceptable AF. Yes in good light the modern AF trickery is great. Tracking, Eye AF, etc, all great. In low light it all goes to crap. I will not take this camera and a native lens to corporate events if I'm working in dim meeting rooms, cocktail receptions, those sorts of things. It went out on one factory-floor job. Simple stand up three's and four's at events and the AF won't grab. D750 will focus on a dark suit in a dark room with me using continuous AF and bounce flash. The Z AF is confounded with simple speaker-at-podium stuff in lower light rooms with very low Kelvin temp lighting. At any AF mode. Fails to acquire. The Z9 just got a firmware update to "reduce" the times it will just lose AF on the subject and jump to the background. Culling a headshot job from yesterday done with the Z6II, starting by deleting all the frames it jumped from the stationary subject to the plain backdrop giving me an OOF shot.

Overheating. No I'm not a shutter monkey and dont do high FPS bursts of birds in flight (the de rigeur metric today it seems). The camera with no rear LCD operating and no stabilization working overheated. Summertime job it shut down repeatedly covering a parade in 85 degrees. Warm to the touch in a conference room doing headshots yesterday.

Good color. Quiet. Full featured. Nice camera. Limits to use professionally. Nice line of native lenses with expanded offerings coming online.

I'm on hold for the next gen and may sell this current stake in Nikon mirrorless. Plenty of bargain obsolete DSLR's out there as replacements.

Love it when it is good. Can't rely on it for all I need.

John Krumm said...

I have the Z6 and 50 1.8 and love it. I’m sure the ll would be great as well. Also bought a used Z7. I emailed the Monochrome conversion guy Mike Johnston used and asked if he could convert the Z6. It’s off to Vancouver, WA today. Hopefully it works. The guy sounded experienced and competent but it’s a one person operation.

John Krumm said...

By the way, he said he just did an S5 if you have a $1200 burning a hole in your pocket.

Eric Rose said...

Wow sounds like a lot of fun. Wish I was down there and could help out. I could be the donut and coffee boy.

Eric

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

John, I wonder what is so complex about stripping color filters off the front of a sensor that makes it such an expensive operation. I'm tempted to grab a screwdriver and a chisel and try it DIY on one of my Leicas....

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

Eric, Sadly it's Austin so donuts are strictly forbidden. Well, except for Kale donuts....

But coffee is strongly encouraged.

Anonymous said...

I have been using a Z6 (and Z50)since it came out and love it. You just have to learn how to set it up and which autofocus settings to use. I don't shoot video but I have heard it's good at that, too.

James said...

I had a Z6 (without the II) and the 85mm 1.8. That was a dreamy combination. But it was more camera than I wanted to carry around. So away it went.

Anonymous said...

Hey Kirk, you’re probably aware, but a lot of the Nikon models are on sale now at a bunch of places ($200 off I think) if you’re interested in dabbling with a new one Z6II. I’ve got the original Z6, with the 24-70mm f/4 and 40mm f/2 as the only native lenses (very happy with both), and a bunch of old AI/S lenses for fun.