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Sample Editorial from Master Photo Digital Magazine

Sample Editorial
Members receive MASTER PHOTO>DIGITAL magazine on a regular basis, as part of their subscription to the Master Photographers Association. Regarded as one the best professional photo imaging magazines in the UK, MASTER PHOTO>DIGITAL is an inspirational read.

It's editor, David Kilpatrick, has been actively involved with the photo industry for many years and is a hands-on tester of much of the equipment reviewed.Here are some sample articles.

Kate Cooper - Successful Fellowship Panel

The first time the MPA magazine featured Kate Cooper was for her stunning ‘studio still-life light table’ single product shots, created in the smallest of workspaces using very simple backgrounds and off-the-shelf items from supermarkets and hardware stores.

Successful Fellowhip Panel by Master Photographer Kate Cooper

With a small investment in tracing paper, black and white foam boards, masking tape, clamps, glass, and the products themselves, Bailey-Cooper Photography’s real money has been put instead into high end digital SLRs from Nikon, a purpose-built small studio, and the legendarily expensive and excellent flash system by Broncolor.

The studio is a 4.5 x 3m annexe to their home, and serves for portraits as well as still life. It is small but efficient. Kate decided on the black food theme after first considering a white portfolio, but worrying about muddy reproduction. The project has taken a year and involved double the number of black food products, with Kate buying large quantities of sweets to search for perfect specimens.

Each shot was taken with the camera tethered to a laptop computer, providing a much larger review image than the rear LCD screen. “I still took the images over to the main system and viewed them large on a calibrated monitor”, Kate explained, “and then I would spot something which needed changing”.

Kate’s method for lighting a transparent or reflective subject against a dark background can be described easily enough. Using a one metre square softbox she masking-taped an opaque black foamboard on the centre leaving just a narrow strip of light round the edges. The softbox, with its black background panel fixed centrally, faced the camera. This was equipped with an effective lens hood and French flags (more black foam panels) to mask any of the rim light from flaring into the lens.

Commercial Photography by Master Photographer Kate Cooper

Catalogue studios normally have a choice of black painted and white painted workspaces, and for this type of shot, the black studio would always be picked. The Bailey-Cooper studio is light, so black panels were placed all round to enclose the setup.

With reflective subjects, the camera may appear as a reflection, so real care may also be needed to cover everything except the lens with a black cloth. Again, the black foamboard sheets did the work. Some frontal fill-in light may be needed on the subject, and this was sometimes created using a white reflector – foamboard again, bought over internet! Kate also used two small box-lights placed either side of the camera lens.

Accurate proportional modelling lamps, preferable tungsten-halogen and perfectly coincident with the flash source, work better than larger incandescent bulb type modelling for such small set-ups. With top-grade lighting in place, the next requirement is the perfect subject. Kate has an eye for photogenic products, but still had to sort through a whole load of blackberries to find the right example.

“The worst one for me was the black pudding”, she told us. “I am a vegetarian and I have a phobia about blood – I cut myself when doing the first black pudding shot and fainted, hitting my head when I fell. So the black pudding looking like a devil with horns on the fork was my response…”

Liquids were poured using guides, or inserted into surgically clean bottles without a single droplet astray; syrup drops or falling peppercorns had to be formed and caught with precision timing. Paul acted as assistant, keeping his finger over the teapot spout then letting go when Kate gave the word.

Even the smallest speck of dust is highlighted by this lighting on small, black subjects and the digital image must be examined at 100 per cent, precisely retouched. Kate hates retouching – “I like to get everything perfect in the camera”, she says. So she used cans of compressed air to blow every tiny speck of dust off each setup, no easy task next to a main road with building work going on nearby!

Kate presented the square images on 20 x 16 black mounts with a fine white keyline, and for her Fellowship judging specified exactly how the two rows of images should be laid out.

Sigma Lens Test
JOHN PARRIS, Scotland’s newest Fellow, has worked with Nikon and Canon from the start. He was in the market for a second 24-70mm, having already got one Canon ƒ2.8 mainstay, and needed a good wide-angle for the full frame of his Canon EOS 1Ds MkII. He had the 10mm Nikon lens previously for his Nikon DX-format kit, and was missing the extremes of wide and fisheye range.

Sigma Lens Shot

So, MASTER PHOTO>DIGITAL arranged a trio of Sigma lenses – the 12-24mm EX DG ƒ4.5-5.6 full frame ultrawide zoom, the classic 15mm ƒ2.8 EX fisheye in its new DG digital optimised form, and the highly regarded 24-70mm ƒ2.8 EX DG.

John’s reaction after fitting and using the Sigma lenses was one of surprise. He had no idea they were so ruggedly made and solid feeling, or that they looked so professionally well matched to a camera of the 1Ds MkII’s size. He also found the HSM ultrasonic focusing every bit the equal of Canon’s original, and in the case of the 24-70mm, an optical performance which matched his much larger and less easily handled Canon lens.

It would have been very easy to get John’s initial reaction because it was pretty ecstatic – given the prices of the lenses relative to the ‘marque’ equivalent – but instead we left him to use the lenses for a couple of months. It is important when field testing to have time to discover the weak points of equipment as well as the wow factor.

John’s verdicts:

John found the 24-70mm to be optically comparable to the Canon model he was used to, and really liked the image quality - if he didn't already have the Canon lens, he would seriously have considered the Sigma, but the lack of HSM on this model was considered a drawback. The 24-70 demonstrated the traditionally "pleasing" bokeh Sigma's EX lenses consistently deliver, and with the right use of depth of field and differential focus, this is an excellent all-purpose lens. Deployed on the full-frame 1Ds Mk II, the 24-70 is in its element.

The 15mm wide, being right in the range of lenses John was looking for, is now part of his arsenal. Having never used fisheye on a full-frame DSLR, I was very impressed to see the results he got with the lens himself, and noticed only slight softness in the extremities. Obviously with the creative options afforded by the 15mm, John provided several examples from recent weddings including the one shot used as the cover for the Scottish Wedding Directory Venues magazine. With the low cost of the 15mm, one would expect that not only should professionals be unafraid to have a Sigma lens on their camera, it seems like a missed opportunity not to have this inexpensive but specialised kit on hand when it offers new possibilities for the social photographer.

The 12-24mm was the one that got the most enthusiastic response, however. The quiet HSM motor and versatile range of operation, making it suitable for everything from landscape and portraiture to interiors resulted in it being used extensively, with particular praise given to the geometry - only very slight distortion in the form of slight stretching of images. Already highly regarded as a lens generally, John added the 12-24 to his collection without hesitation.

© 2007 David Kilpatrick, MASTER PHOTO>DIGITAL Magazine