Tye Sheridan - High Res Photos +3 / -3

Pros

Close-up framing is looking much better!

The more of the frame that doesn’t include Tye’s face, the less useful it is. These new images are much tighter and give us much more detail.

Multiple lighting setups = flexibility!

Having these images in several different lighting situations is incredibly helpful. The colors outside are very rich which is great.

Great variety of facial expressions!

There’s a ton to work with in the expressions you had him make. Just remember to get a closeup of the eyes open and closed.

Some things to consider

That darn blur/focus/grain…

Remember there are three types of blur - depth of field (iris), motion from you holding the camera & motion from Tye moving around. As you compensate for blur by either closing the iris or allowing the shutter to stay open for less time (both allowing less light into the camera’s sensor), grain is introduced. Generally, we would expect to see one OR the other (blur or grain). Many of the indoor shots appear to have both grain and blur, which likely means there is just not enough light in the room. Add light.

Two things that make your job focusing more difficult: A lower f-stop and a slower shutter speed.

Right/Left/Left - Use this cheat sheet

Wide and mid-shot framing can be tighter

Closeup: Just below the shoulders to a few inches above the head

Mid-shot: Just above the elbows to a few inches above the head

Wide: Just above the belt line to a few inches above the head


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Deepak High Res Image Reference

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Rob Meadows MTP