Fashion Photography by CineEye
It was a long evening last night here in CineEye. We had a small fashion photography session here in our London studio. Our long term collaborator fashion photographer Mr.Rashed worked with the lovely model Chloe Kang and makeup artist Billie.
Fashion photography and especially fashion editorials often are about achieving an emotional response to a photograph that tells a story. This time we tried to achieve some emotionally interesting photographs by using extreme makeup and intense poses. We hope we achieved some of the desired result largely thanks to Chloe. She is a wonderful, active and very creative model. We also want to thank our makeup artist Billie. Fashion photographer London Mr.Rashed did a great job by capturing high quality images as well as providing excellent post processing. We are happy with the result, but what is more important – our client loved the photos too! Let’s hope this is a beginning of a long term cooperation.
Recommendations
Anyone interested to work with Chloe on another project can find her here.
We also recommend Miss Billie as a reliable and creative makeup artist.
Work With Us
CineEye commercial photography team is here to create emotionally compelling and interesting fashion photography and fashion editorial photography for your brand or magazine. Contact us any time and tell us about your idea.
A photo-shoot is hard work! I have a question. When you take sunset shots on the beach, do you meter for the sun and how do you keep the sun from being over exposed?
Metering decisions are based not only on technical knowledge and environmental situation, but also on your artistic concept in any particular case. If you, for example, want to photograph model as a silhouette against the sunset, then you would meter for the sun. If you want to have the model’s skin well exposed, you meter for the skin. If you shoot with more or less professional camera, shoot raw and you will be able to recover some information even if the sun is overexposed. Another option if you are metering for the skin, is to use lights to brighten up the model, which will also enable you to avoid overexposing the sun. Another option is to take several photos with exactly the same composition, but at different exposure levels (bracketing) and combine them in post production in order to get perfect exposure everywhere you need.