Ok, so it’s not quite the prairie, but it is a nice, little house that is secluded out in what might as well be the middle of nowhere. A few weeks ago I had the chance to come visit this quaint, little house and take some pictures for my bosses friend, Bob, who is looking to sell his house and move closer to the city. After reading some Strobist blog posts about shooting to sell your house (One-Light Real Estate Photography, Working Around the House, and How To: Use a Free Blog to Help Sell Your House) I was armed with just enough knowledge to be a little dangerous when it comes to shooting architecture so I decided to have a go at it (this is my first ever architectural shoot).
Overall I think they turned out pretty good, though I did feel limited shooting a crop-sensor camera and using 18mm as my widest setting. Ideally I would have been shooting with a full frame or something along the lines of 12-14mm on the wide for a lens (or both if I can have my cake and eat it too
, but I’m trying to get over the constant desire for more gear and just make do with what I have. So for this whole shoot I used my D90, the Nikon 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5, my SB-800, and 2x SB-600s and worked them to the best of my ability.
I have a slideshow at the end of the post of all the final images from the shoot, but I wanted to share a couple of them with you and talk about shooting them.
First, the exterior.
All of the exterior shots were done with a tripod, natural light, and bracketing. I knew I wanted to deliver a mix of HDR shots and flash-lit shots, so I planned to do all of the exterior shots as HDR. The one at the beginning of the post is neat because of the solar flare, which I dig. I feel this shot has a little more character than your typical exterior shot, but I also got some regular shots of the same area, just in case. It’s important to put your own spin on every shoot, so this was my attempt at doing this.
I also really like this shot:
I love HDR sunset shots – they looks so surreal. And with this house and the large windows I wanted to catch the warm glow from the inside. Plus there’s a little flair on the light that I like.
The inside was a whole different beast. I decided to put my speedlights to work to create natural looking light with flash and try and blend it with the light coming in through the windows.
This is a good shot showing the large windows and the ambient light mixed with my flash light. I had the two SB-600s bouncing off the ceiling on camera left and then used my SB-800 on-camera for a little on-axis fill. Overall it creates a pretty pleasing look that doesn’t really look flash lit, but it creates depth to the room that wouldn’t be there using just the ambient light (in fact at the ambient exposure most of the room was in dark, dark shadow).
The other really neat thing about this house are the stairs – they are built straight into the brick. It creates a really unique look to the basement of the house, as you can see here:
This was lit similarly to the interior shot above: on-camera SB-800 fill, SB-600 lighting up the ceiling by the stairs, and another SB-600 bouncing off the ceiling for fill.
By the time I was shooting the basement my legs were so tired from sitting, shooting, getting up to adjust light placement, and repeating. I think Josi and I spent 3-4 hours there shooting and talking, so it was a long, but fun, and educational day. I learned a lot and came away with some decent shots. I could see myself doing some more of this in the future, but in order to make it a little easier, a couple more lights and a wider lens, like the Tokina 12-24mm f/4 lens (which would also rock for environmental portraits
, would definitely help.
Take a look at the slideshow below for all of the shots I did of this really awesome house.































