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  Photography Forum: Digital Darkroom Forum: 
  Q. what is meant by Dave Hill Effect ?
Saad Salem
Asked by Saad Salem   Donor  (K=89003) on 11/9/2008 
Hi every one,
any one tell me what is Dave Hill effect,and what it do ?
I just wanted to know what is the purpose of his effect,and what it do exactly
thank you in advance,
Saad.


    


Caterina  Berimballi
 Caterina  Berimballi   (K=27299) - Comment Date 11/10/2008
Check out his website: http://www.davehillphoto.com/

It's basically a lighting style that initially appears to be post-processed HDR and gives images a cartoon-ish look. He once wrote in a thread from another site:

"Hi guys,
Wow, I'm flattered by all this talk! I'm glad some of you like my work. I really can't share much about specifics, and I'm not a photoshop guru, but I am definitely down to discuss. I haven't used HDR or that tone-mapping stuff. I just recently heard about it, and it seems you need to bracket your images to do it well. That would be almost impossible when shooting humans! :-) In terms of cameras, depending on the budget, I use canon digitals and H1's; all prime lenses. Canons are SOOO fun and easy to shoot with, but the H1 files are crisp, edge to edge, and print bigger. Kinda a trade off. I'm a big fan of using lights, and I'd say the primary factor of how my images look is the lighting setup. Photoshop is of course crucial as well, but you gotta have a clean raw file to begin with. Too much processing can give you nasty digital grain, halos, all that stuff, which may look good on Flickr, but when printed on paper for a portfolio that an art director sees, looks like junk. I would totally suggest that new photogs spend less time on PS and more time shooting and playing with lights, and learning how to direct their subjects. As to the comment about $50k shoots... haha... that made me laugh. For sure my budgets have been getting bigger, but a lot of the stuff on my site paid peanuts. You really have to work your butt off; lots of sweat, set-building, hauling lights all over the place, day after day, for at least a few years etc. But that's part of the adventure, right!? Let me know if u guys have any more questions. Thanks!

Dave Hill
davehillphoto.com"

So there you have it. It's all in the lighting apparently. If you don't have the lighting gear though, you could try tweaking Highlights and Shadows in Photoshop or tone map using Photomatrix software.




Saad Salem
 Saad Salem  Donor  (K=89003) - Comment Date 11/11/2008
thank you so much Rina, you done more than enough,
my appreciation,
Saad.




Daniel Saaiman
 Daniel Saaiman   (K=1222) - Comment Date 8/18/2009
Check out the Topaz Adjust and Lucisart photoshop plug-ins. They give a similar effect.




Andrzej Pradzynski
 Andrzej Pradzynski   (K=22541) - Comment Date 8/19/2009
True, Rina is right where to look for the prime hints. Spend some time and do more study on his work and then look for strobist technique on how to light object up for special effect. Practicing is the key. I'm not a fun of simple increase of local contrast, remapping tonality or using PS plugins to automate the process, it may be needed but if you like the look better start from the scratch. Start with the lighting.
BR, NJ




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