This shoot was full of interesting challenges. The primary challenge was to balance getting close enough to the couple to make a good shot, but all the time being mindful of the crashing surf and sea-spray that wanted to take out any of the camera equipment that was set up across the shore on tripods.
The second hurdle, which is always inherent in shooting sunset portraits, was to squeeze in all the shots within the 4-5 minute window of "golden light." Thankfully Misha's sister Kavita was available to help pose the couple (having gotten married the previous year she was in tune with the standard poses) and to help me hold the flash units while I was messing with the metering and compensation factors.
The final really big crucible was the need to nail the lighting. Misha's very dark skin next to Stevo's fairer skin would look very strange in the direct, super-harsh strobe. Our method of compensating for this was to shoot the flashes through a gel filter which would "warm" the strobe, turning the light into a more natural tone. The first gel I tried, seemed to do the trick, so we went with it! The end result was a perfect balance of skin tones which left both him and her looking stellar and natural.
The photos are the result of about a month's worth of practice and Stevo's generosity in agreeing to let me borrow his flashes and camera. Enjoy!
Strobist: The photos with flash were taken with 2 SB-600 slave units one to camera left (tripod mounted), and one to camera right (hand held), one with diffuser, and one with bounce card.