
Christopher Nisperos "Making of" photos:
Florian Kleinefenn
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... continued
THE LUX MAGAZINE SHOOT

LENS
To fit the magazine cover, I
wanted a sharp
three-quarter
shot in 8x10 format, so I choose the
Schneider-Kreuznach
480mm f
8.4 Apo-Symmar L.
This lens is famous for it's crisp rendition without
being excessively contrasty. I knew
that I could rely on it to give me
details in the darker areas (see the highlights on the model's black
sweater) while still letting me preserve the important textures in the
highlights of the face.
PROPS

I decided to use a pearl necklace as a prop. This gave
me a way to keep the portrait a bit soft, yet still show the sharpness
of my Schneider lens. I asked my model to wrap one end of the necklace
around her finger and stretch it out, tight, parallel to the lensboard.
As well, I asked her to keep this necklace at the same plane as her
eyes (which was not so easy on a two second exposure!).
LIGHTING
The lighting for this type of portraiture comes
directly from cinema lighting and the effects from the various light
sources, which can only be judged from the camera position, usually
have to be adjusted down
to the centimeter. Since I usually work
without an assistant, this keeps me running back and forth from light
to camera --climbing, crawling, standing on tip-toes -- to adjust,
re-adjust and check the lighting. Jeans, knee pads and cowhide gloves
are standard studiowear! Metering is done at this point, not to find
exposure settings, but rather to establish lighting ratios.
I use Dedo spotlights for my main, hair, background and
kicker lights, and a diffused tungsten-halogen lamp as a fill. Using
Dedolight combined with a Schneider lens make the technical job easier
(artistic errors are another question!).
Since my model had a fairly full face, I decided to use
a "short lighting" scheme. This puts the side of the face which is
closer to the camera is in shadow and gives a narrowing effect. You can
judge the placement of the main light by noticing a small catchlight in
the eye and, in particular, by the formation of a triangle-shaped
highlight which appears on the cheek of the model, nearest the camera.
The background
--a white wall which was given a subtle
pattern by directing a 650 watt Dedo spotlight through
a LightBreak cucoloris-- was lit in high key, so I then used a 100 watt
Dedolight to backlight the model's far cheek and make it blend-in, or "bleed"
in. This helped me to further "thin her down", visually.
SCRIMS
Scrims are indispensable for
this kind of lighting,
especially for shading blondes or bald men.
I used an Avenger
scrim to
reduce the light falling on her forehead, and help maintain the
attention on her huge eyes.
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