Globalti
Legendary Member
This weekend I will be in a YHA in Scotland with my long-time climbing buddy and about 45 of his oldest friends, celebrating his final Munroe by climbing it en masse. I actually climbed his first Munroe with him in Torridan about 20 years ago.
As a commemorative gift for my buddy I plan to do one of those picture books, which you can make online and get printed, containing a portrait of each couple or individual. The side benefit will be that it will feed my own growing interest in portrait photography.
I will be shooting with an oldish Panasonic Lumix DMC FZ7 and I understand the principles of portrait photography so I will try to stick with a focal length of 80 -100 mm in order to keep facial proportions real. If I can't get good shots outdoors on the mountain I will be shooting indoors using a higher sensitivity, hence a little more noise and the possibility of some blurring. At least with digital you can bracket and delete. My biggest concern is that YHAs are mostly lit by flourescent tubes, which could cast a nasty greeny blue hue on my pics as well as shadows, although probably not as bad as incandescent lights. I don't want to use flash. Actually I think the Lumix has a setting for flourescent light, will check.
Anybody got any suggestions or ideas?
As a commemorative gift for my buddy I plan to do one of those picture books, which you can make online and get printed, containing a portrait of each couple or individual. The side benefit will be that it will feed my own growing interest in portrait photography.
I will be shooting with an oldish Panasonic Lumix DMC FZ7 and I understand the principles of portrait photography so I will try to stick with a focal length of 80 -100 mm in order to keep facial proportions real. If I can't get good shots outdoors on the mountain I will be shooting indoors using a higher sensitivity, hence a little more noise and the possibility of some blurring. At least with digital you can bracket and delete. My biggest concern is that YHAs are mostly lit by flourescent tubes, which could cast a nasty greeny blue hue on my pics as well as shadows, although probably not as bad as incandescent lights. I don't want to use flash. Actually I think the Lumix has a setting for flourescent light, will check.
Anybody got any suggestions or ideas?


