BACKDROP EXCHANGE

buy, sell, rent, trade photography and video backdrops from other members

Rose-Anne Kumpunen
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  • Trenton, Ontario
  • Canada
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Started this discussion. Last reply by Melissa Mar 19.

FOR RENT

Started Mar 14

EXCHANGE

Started Mar 14

 

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Rose-Anne Kumpunen and Steve are now friends
October 24
Looking for a 10 x 20 solid black muslin backdrop....
October 23
I am looking for a large group backdrop, 20x30, something neutral.
May 26
Hi if anybody has any photo props just laying around that you don't need or use anymore. Please let me know I may be able to take it off your hands. Thnks for your time. Steve
May 26
Flip's photos was featured
April 13

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At 11:23am on March 10, 2009, Wallace Russell said…
You're very welcome. Funny when I looked at your new backdrop site I was thinking my backdrops need to be 20x30 cause I'm shooting some teams with 20 kids - but I only use it once a year. And I don't want to use the same drop every year. RENT came to mind. Then I see the exchange. This could work out good. Hope your new site is successful.

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Rose-Anne Kumpunen

Posing Tips

Don't ask them to say cheese. Instead, just before shooting, ask them to sing Old Macdonald Had a Farm. Kids know the words and respond well, and even the adults may laugh. You get natural body language and better facial expressions.

Use a symmetrical shape of grouping. Try an inverted triangle with one person in the front middle, place pairs of people beside and behind, three in the next row etc. Photo may look more balanced if everyone gets the same amount of space and each person is showcase… Continue

Posted on March 9, 2009 at 8:40pm —

Rose-Anne Kumpunen

The Secret Language of Photographs

The metalanguage of paintings was a big deal in the Neo-Classical, Romantic, Renaissance periods -- each person's position and pose in the painting was carefully calculated. The viewer, if able to "read" the painting, was privy to "relative status" information that a casual observer missed.

Body language and poses still make a difference in the feel of the photo -- do the family members touch each other? Do their shoulders overlap to indicate a tight family unit? Do the senior members sit in th… Continue

Posted on March 9, 2009 at 8:39pm —

Rose-Anne Kumpunen

Storing and transporting a backdrop

Don't store the backdrop in a bag, dyes are organic compounds, and you could end up with a smelly backdrop. There are better ways to make an impression on your clients! Let it breathe when in storage, dry shelf in the studio or basement will make it happy. For transportation (especially for oversize backdrops) get a gym or hockey bag or use a construction-grade garbage bag (Home Depot has them).

Don't fold backdrops (you'll see the creases in photos), instead crush pack for transportation. Crea… Continue

Posted on March 9, 2009 at 8:38pm —

Rose-Anne Kumpunen

Lighting backdrops

Backdrop darkness (like everything else that's visible to human eye in the universe) is a function of reflected light.

If you want the backdrop to look darker, put less light on it, or move it farther away from your subject light boxes (e.g., with family on right, you'd use a 30ft to give a floor piece and still have room to move the group to foreground).

In turn, more light on the backdrop will make it appear lighter (subject lights will spill to backdrop). One great way to get variety is to… Continue

Posted on March 9, 2009 at 8:30pm —

 
 
 

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