Back from a whirlwind visit to Brussels covering a conference on behalf of a client; shooting speakers, delegates and the accompanying exhibition space. I do a lot of this kind of work and believe me, it's challenging. Over the course of two days I shot, edited, captioned and uploaded more than 2,000 images to supply media outlets across Europe and it's always rewarding to watch the download statistics building in the hours, days and weeks following an event.
Conference lighting directors often use very low levels of light. It's intimate, and running the lights at such low levels makes skin glow. The eye has an affinity for the warm light of an incandescent light source reaching back to the dawn of time. For photographers this can mean working at ISO values which would have been impossible only a couple of years ago. Today, we shoot at ISO 3200 and above, confident that the quality will be there, and able to focus on an eyeball in levels of light where it's barely possible to see, let alone read.
I always like to include a few images like the one below in the coverage. This sort of picture always finds a home in a design somewhere.
Moving quickly from a windowless room, lit largely by the reflected light from a projector screen, I made the first image using the 3000K white balance I already had set on my D3S before quickly dialing in a more technically correct white balance for the second frame. I prefer the first version.
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