Ryan O. Hicks Creative | Designer | Photographer

25Jul/100

Vintage/Retro Photo Post Processing Tutorial

featuredImageEmilyTut

I recently went down to Jacksonville, FL for a trip to house hunt because I will be moving there with my family mid September this year. While I was there I had the pleasure to meet up with a buddy of mine in Sebastian, Brian Storey (please check his work out; I can’t say enough about his skills).  He made a few phone calls and was able to line up two models for both us to shoot, Taylor and Emily.  I had a lot of fun and can't wait till I move in down there.

After posting some of Emily's photos, I was getting a lot of people asking me how I processed the photos.  Although, not every one of her photos was processed like this exact tutorial. I will help explain how I did two of my favorite images from her session.  I like to process a lot of my photos with a vintage/retro/old poloraid feel to them.  I enjoy that style, and I feel it helps convey certain moods in photographs.  Without this type of processing there would of been nothing exciting about the image.  The original image is fine SOOC (straight out of camera), but the mood is created by the tones and final post-processing I did to it.  Not every photo will come out like the end result in this tutorial.  A lot of factors depend on how the end result will look.  For example how well the original image was strobed, your scene, and original tones in the image.

You need a well lit image to begin with.  It doesn't matter how good your post-processing skills are, you will need a good SOOC shot to begin this process.  A lot of people don't understand the importance of lighting in your image (this is whole other topic).  If your image isn't well lit, your image is broken.  Always think ahead when you are on a shoot for how you think you will be processing the photo.  This will help with model placement, poses, lighting, and other things to make your post-process (PP) easier and quicker.  My workflow is always Camera>Lightroom>Photoshop.  I split my editing almost equally between lightroom and photoshop now, but that also depends on the type of photo concept I am working on.

Here is my original image.  It is a good exposure and I'm happy with it, but the mood just isn't complete.

Emily Original

31Jan/100

Case Study of the Amanda Photo Composite

This will help show illustrate the process I went through to create Amanda's Photo Composite.

Here are the stock images that were used or partly used somewhere within the photo.

28Dec/090

Case Study of the Trevor Stinson Firefighter Photo

Below is a small case study put together to show the process of how I came about the firefighter photo of Trevor Stinson.

This was shot for the Monticello (Indiana) Fire Department Calendar that I am currently finishing up.  It was originally scheduled as a 2010 calendar, but I think it might end up being their 2011 version.

Case Study

Final Image

Trevor Stinson

Trevor Stinson: Monticello Fire Department

1Dec/092

My New Business Cards

Received my new business cards today.

Uprinting.com was kind enough to send me 250 free business cards of my choice.  Huge thanks goes out to Rachel in the customer service department that put up with my multiple emails, letting me have the 250 free prints, and getting the job paid for me.  Much love.

I choose the uv-gloss and rounded die-cut corners.  Came out perfect and printed exactly how i proofed them.  Took a little while to get here because the proofs were approved just before Thanksgiving, but all in all Uprinting.com gets a big thumbs up from me!  Will do business with in the future.

24Nov/090

Case Study: MFD 2010 Calendar

Case Study

Client: Monticello Fire Department – 2010 Calendar
Photographer: Ryan O. Hicks (me)
Model: Matt Schroeder

Strobist Settings:
Canon 5d2
50mm f/1.4
1/200s - f/5.6 - ISO200 - 50mm
580ex2 shot into 28” Apollo Wescott softbox camera left

Click to enlarge images.

csMSOriginal