The iPhone Fashion Shoot
Tuesday, July 13, 2010 at 11:00AM |
Glyn Evans Lee Morris over at Fstoppers.com decided to test the capabilities of his iPhone 3GS by shooting a full fashion photography session in his studio, and the following video shows that shoot and his studio set-up.
Now whilst the video shows what can be done with an iPhone and a studio setup, I was disappointed that the finished photos were sent to an image touch-up lab rather than being processed on the iPhone itself using any number of photo apps.
Of all the shots shown, the one below is my favourite, as it has a nice natural look to it, and could have easily been manipulated with an app like CameraBag to look just as good as the final image.
The above image is the original unedited photo taken with Lee's iPhone 3GS.
The above image is the professionally edited version of photo Lee's photo. The full set of photos can be seen here on Flickr, but which one do you prefer?
iPhone 3GS,
iPhone Fashion Shoot in
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Reader Comments (6)
I saw this on a few iphone website and for it is a pointless statement because of for things:
1. he has the knowledge of a pro fashion photographer
2. he has quite some pro lighting
3. MOST IMPORTANT: this is freakin' photoshopped
4. it's a hot model =D
sorry for typos, i didn't proof read
** "I saw this on a few iphone websites and for me it is a pointless statement because of four things" **
I too saw the original when it went up and pointed Lee to my own iPhone fashion shot I did several months ago...I used cheap (sub £300 tungsten light) and did all the processing in phone.
NSFW: http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4067/4428260736_3700a8c08f.jpg
Also did a natural light one that you can see on flickr beside it....
I understand what he was trying to show but he missed the boat by using the expensive lights and sending the images out to a retoucher.
Unlike Eric though I see no reason not to use a "hot" model....
He's made himself more famous now but most folk seem to think he's a bit of an arse...which is unfortunate as I thought he did a pretty good job.
oh and I like the bleached out processed one more than original
They're both nice, but my preference is toward the original and not the bleached-out post-procesed image. The original has nice tones and saturation. But bleached out is probably what the client wanted.
=M=
Now let's see him shoot a wedding with his iPhone . I keep threating my clients that i will shoot their wedding with my iPhone when they try to bargain me down on price! I should give them one price with my pro gear like d3x and one with my iPhone :) hehe