Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/02/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I decided to start a new thread for this, which came from the Peter Lik thread. Black people are not hard to photograph, in my experience, but it seems like most people have troubles with it. The high school I taught at two years ago was about 50% black. The yearbooks the kids got really pissed me off. Most of my students were rendered as black blobs with nothing but eyes and teeth visible. These were done by so-called professional photographers in a studio! Part of that is undoubtedly poor printing by the yearbook publisher, but there no excuse for that either. The big thing with blacks, or any other dark-skinned people is DO NOT UNDEREXPOSE, not even a tiny bit. Black people are not really black; they vary from dark brown to light brown. Even the darkest-skinned black people are not black, but they?re close enough to the point on a films characteristic curve that any underexposure of them drops the skin tone below the point where detail is rendered. What I do when photographing black people with negative film, color or BW, is meter the darkest part of the person?s hair. Regardless of skin tone, virtually all black people have hair that really is black. You don?t want that underexposed. I meter the hair and set it at Zone III. I usually want the skin at Zone IV or even V. This might be overexposing, but its ok. With digital, its easier. I just use my Minolta Flash Meter IV incident meter. its readings are perfect, even for dark skin. This was done at ISO 3200 in my Canon 5DmkII, incident reading. http://chriscrawfordphoto.com/chris-details.php?product=1703 The kids in the photo were some of my former students. I ran into them at a carnival the summer after I had them in my 9th grade English class at South Side High School. They saw me taking pictures and asked me to do one of them. I promised them a set of prints when school started in the fall, and on the first day of school they found me at school and asked for their pictures! Another problem I saw was photofinishing. When I was in college, I worked in a one-hour photo lab at a Meijer store. Meijer is a big-box super center chain in the midwest. Our Fuji minilabs had a video monitor so we could individually color/density correct each photo if we wanted. This took too long for one-hour service, but we had some customers who asked for it and were willing to wait. Most of the time, the machine?s full-auto mode did fine with white people, but black people were rendered VERY orange! It didn?t print them too dark, but the color was wacky. I felt bad giving those photos to customers. They deserved better. What I ended up doing was telling the black customers that I wanted to print their film manually because the machine screwed up black people?s skin color (I had a couple of examples to show them). If things were busy, I?d ask if it was ok for me to take longer than an hour to make sure their photos looked great. No one ever objected to the wait, and most of them said they?d gotten the same bad photos at other labs too and had just assumed that?s the way the film rendered them. I built up a big clientele of black families who brought their film to the store I worked at, and asked for me to do their film. Some of them spread the word in the community, and we had a lot of them who drive a long way to get here rather than going to stores closer to where they lived. I don?t know why the machines couldn?t have been programmed to print black folks correctly, but it certainly didm;t have to be that way. I made them look natural in the prints I made. I haven?t worked in a photo lab in 15 years. I imagine with digital things have changed. None of the labs here even process film anymore, they just print digital files, and usually they just print the file without correcting it, so hopefully black people?s skin is no longer orange in their photos! -- Chris Crawford Fine Art Photography Fort Wayne, Indiana 260-437-8990 http://www.chriscrawfordphoto.com My portfolio http://www.facebook.com/pages/Christopher-Crawford/48229272798 Become a fan on Facebook