How I got the shot: Working with gels
Lately, I have been having so much fun creating portraits using coloured gels. It really doesn’t matter if you use strobes, speedlights or continuous lights, gels can add a totally new element to your work. I put together exactly how I got the shot of a model using two LED light panels and working with gels.
Staging the scene
I used a black background (painted canvas); you could use cloth or seamless paper. Using two Neewer LED light panels — one on either side of the model — and playing with various different coloured gels; red/red, red/green, blue/yellow and pink/yellow combinations. My favourite has to be red/red and blue/yellow combinations.
Camera & light settings
Now, this doesn’t mean the exact same setting will work for you, but it may give you a good place to start. We had the lights turned up fully (it was really dark in that space) and it also required turning the ISO up to get the shot, but totally worth it.
I shot with my Sony a7R III and my Tamron 28-75mm lens in Manual mode, with settings of f/2.8, ISO 640 and 1/125s. My white balance was set to Auto, with spot metering on. My focal length was 28mm.
For my lights, they are manual and turned to the brightest setting for blue, I had the yellow turned down. The gels are plastic cellophane sheets that slide in front of the LED panels. As the lights do not get hot, there was no risk of them melting the gels.
Camera mode: Manual
Exposure: f/2.8, ISO 640, 1/125s
White Balance: Auto
Metering: Spot metering
Focal length: 28mm
Post-processing
I edited the shots in Adobe Photoshop, as there was a bit to clean up in the background. I also added a red/green (or matching gel color) gradient fill and a Color Lookup Table (I really like the TealOrangePlusContrast LUT). Finally, I finished things off by adding a texture to the background.
Model: Axe; Hair and Makeup: Em Mrietta