Monday, July 28, 2008

Chinese Opera

chinese opera
As a photojournalist, I get to cover all kinds of events. Recently I was asked to get some pictures from a Chinese Opera in town. My editor said he'd really like some performance images, but that cameras were forbidden in the theater. He said I ought to go early and get some backstage images.

So I did.

I've never been to a Chinese Opera before, and had a great time goofing around with the performers backstage. I met performers, makeup artists, and wardrobe specialists, who were all more than happy to have me hang around and take pictures.

At one point, I hadn't noticed as one of the performers headed down a long hallway backstage by himself. I was busy photographing a performer having her makeup done, when I heard a loud, sharp yell. I jumped! When I turned toward the source of the scream, the performer down the hall looked at me in surprise, then doubled over in laughter. I then realized he was just warming up his voice, and the yell was part of his usual pre-show routine. He got a kick out of my reaction. As soon as my heart restarted, I laughed, too.

You see above an image from the performance, despite the earlier ban on cameras. Turns out, as I suspected, they didn't mind pictures. They just found the flash distracting, natch. So when I promised to go flashless, with a smile, I got the green light.

Suited me just fine, really. Why would I want to blot out the artistry of a professional theater light person with my flash? I just cranked up the ISO, opened the aperture up to 2.8, made sure VR was on, and got plenty of good frames.

The key to getting clear, low-light images is to make sure to set the ISO high enough. I once made the mistake of thinking it'd be best to use a lower ISO. You know, because the lower the ISO, the lower the digital noise, right? I figured I could always boost the exposure in Photoshop later, and get a good image. Wrong. Turns out, an underexposed image shot in low light looks like mud when you try that boost-the-exposure trick. The mud is especially mucky in the darker areas of the frame. I had outsmarted myself right out of some clean images. So for this job I used the correct stratosphere-level ISO and they came out nice and clear, no surprise.

Want to license the above and similar images from the Chinese Opera for editorial use? Click here.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Meet the students in Africa

Here's a short (three-minute) multimedia piece about the people in Africa that are working hard to improve their community school.