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My Weekend Workshop With Mary DuPrie

By Scott on Monday, August 11th, 2008 at 5:37 am | events, Photography.

carly2sm.jpg

Three workshops in one week is a lot for even me; I took that architectural shooting workshop last weekend, then I taught that sports shooting workshop on Tuesday for the Chicago Bears, and then this past weekend my buddy Terry White and I took a weekend workshop with well known Detroit-area photographer and instructor Mary DuPrie.

My buddy Dave Moser had given me one of Mary’s excellent DVDs last year for my birthday (it was a DVD for photographers on how to work with and pose models), so when Terry told me about her workshop, I was already very familiar with her work, and signed on right away (she only allows four photographers per workshop, which gives you lots of personal one-on-one instruction).

The workshop started with a Friday night “meet and greet” with Mary, her assistant Chris, Tammy the make-up artist, and the other photographers (Blake and David). Mary’s large natural-light studio is ideal for a workshop like this, and besides having just about every prop and background known to man (I told her it was like shooting in a Pier One store), she also had about every style of strobe, softbox, and accessory, too, so everything you’d want was just an arms-length away the whole weekend.

The next morning we got right to work. While the make-up artist was getting our professional model ready, Mary started the day with a session on how to work

with someone who has never done any professional modeling before. One of the other photographers in the workshop, New York based photographer David Rogers had brought his girlfriend Genevieve (’Gen’ for short) with him, and Mary convinced her to be be our ’stunt’ model (which was perfect because Gen had no modeling experience, and in fact generally hated having her photo taken).

She showed us the typical mistakes first-time models make, and how the photographers can lead the model and help them avoid falling into the traps that make for bad clunky looking photos. It was all about posing, positioning, posture, hands, and even how to smile, and by the end of it, not only had we learned a lot, but Gen wound up with an amazing final image. Mary did an incredible job with her transformation, and seeing her do this “start to finish” posing job was absolutely eye-opening.

After a short break, we set up for a beauty shoot with Carly, our incredibly patient model for the day. Mary has a very slick lighting set-up for this kind of shoot, using only two-lights, and we all got to work with Carly, tweak the lights, or any part of the set we wanted (not just for this shoot—but for all the shoots during the workshop). Mary encouraged the students to experiment, try different looks, different poses, direct the shoot, and even critique the shots with the model during the shoot (Mary shoots tethered directly to a television screen).

I took the shot above of Carly using that simple two light set-up (I’m not going to go into the set-up here, since it’s part of what Mary teaches in her workshop), but I can tell you how the photo was shot and processed. I started in Lightroom where I dragged the Black slider to the right to darken up the shadows a bit. Then I jumped right over to Photoshop where I did the absolute minimum of retouching:

  1. I removed any small blemishes using the Healing Brush
  2. I removed some tan lines by sampling her fleshtone and painting over those areas on a separate layer and changing the blend mode to Color, then lowering the opacity until it blended perfectly.
  3. I lightened just the whites of her eyes (I didn’t touch or adjust the color of her eyes whatsoever).
  4. I sharpened the photo using an Unsharp Mask.

I took the shot with a Nikon D-300 at 200 ISO, at f/5.6 at 1/125 of a second with a 70-200mm f/2.8 VR lens at 105mm.studio.jpg

After a great lunch in the studio, we went onto a very dramatic lighting set-up in the afternoon and worked on different lighting and posing scenarios. Mary is really brilliant at posing, but she’s also an absolute MacGyver-like wizard at creating backgrounds that look so simple, but photograph incredibly well when you use them right. She has so many shots you’d swear were shot on location in a fine home, or in an office, or on a rooftop, etc. but they’re all shot right there in her studio.

The next day (Sunday), we had a different model for the day (Tiffany), and ran through an entirely different set of looks, poses, and sets, including mixing in natural light with strobes as well as lots of Westcott Spiderlights. Mary also set up a really slick beach set-up that looked just like it was shot at a cabana at the beach. We even set-up a shoot with flashes firing through holes in a hall and a smoke machine to make the beams really stand out (it looks much cooler than it sounds).

Overall, the workshop was fantastic. I have to hand it to Mary; she worked us hard, but she worked her butt off the entire time, too. She never took a break. She didn’t stop to check email, or take calls, or anything—she was totally attentive to her students, and she really focused on making sure it was worth our time and money (and it absolutely, positively was).

Since most workshops just focus on the lighting aspects, Mary’s workshop is unique, because hers focuses on posing, backgrounds, and the business side of things as much as anything. I would highly recommend her workshop to any photographer who wants to take their posing and composition skills to a new level.

She only does a handful of these workshops each year, and her next one is coming up in September (remember; she only takes four photographers per workshop), so if you’re interesting in going—I’d sign up right away (here’s the link).

Thanks Mary, for all your hard work, dedication, for a lot of learning and some fun and laughs along the way.

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  • Very Cool—and Some Not-so Cool—Stuff
    [...] 1) Scott’s got a shot of a model that’ll make your freakin’ chest hurt. Seriously. It’s that beautiful: http://www.scottkelby.com/blog/2008/archives/1799 [...]

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  1. #1

    Hey - Scott this is Chad Pennington (the guy that had your first book at the Jacob Javits Center in NY) Just wanted to say you always stay with something fresh and new and you are a true icon for my to follow thanks for being you. Will you eventually take all of this knowledge and put it into your new photography hand book and add a bonus dvd as well with set up,exif data and such? Please let us know we (i mean ME) can’t wait. Thanks again

    Chad Pennington on August 11th, 2008 at 6:04 am
  2. #2

    Wow!

    Oscar Nonis on August 11th, 2008 at 7:01 am
  3. #3

    Love the topic, as being better prepared and more at-ease with models is something I have always wanted to learn.

    I applaud you for doing THREE workshops…always learning!

    Michael

    Michael Shaw on August 11th, 2008 at 7:17 am
  4. #4

    Well, I can’t afford to go to the US to attend her workshops, but I decided to order one of her DVDs. I especially need more information on working with models. Most of my models are amateur and have no idea what to do. I help them out fine, right now, but I’m sure it can be a lot better. Thanks for the tip.

    Paul Baarn on August 11th, 2008 at 7:22 am
  5. #5

    Hi Scott. (Please forgive me for posting this twice but I’m not sure if you get time to read the old post comments or you get tehm directly as they come in?

    I posted this first thing this morning but there have been several new posts since then and I think there’s a good change you won’t see it?).

    I have hit a brick wall with trying to create sub collections inside a collection in Lightroom 2.

    In your blog a while ago you mentions this problem. Please can you tell me what I can do as a workaround until Adobe get their act together and make it like it was in Lightroom 1?

    If it wasn’t broken why fix it??

    Thank you.

    Dermot.

    P.S. I would personally like invite you to our photo walk in Belfast but I imagine you will be busy that day??!

    http://www.photoshopuser.com/photowalk/city/belfast.html

    Dermot Murphy on August 11th, 2008 at 8:09 am
  6. #6

    Scott, enjoy your blog with my morning coffee daily. I purchased Westcott, Monte Zuckers spiderlight studio. Per your praise last year. Perhaps one day you could go in depth on mixing camera flash and spiderlights for best portaits. I know understand you use spiderlightslights for product shots. I would like to learn to use my 580ex2 with proper gel or shoot thru umbrella to freeze exposure at f/11 without pushing film. I also use cloth muslin background, which i’m dissapointed with also. Curiouse what you use for background, besides Lastolite Hi-Lite.

    Thank you,
    Keith
    p.s. Still saving for Elinchrom Ranger. $$$

    Keith Shriner on August 11th, 2008 at 9:11 am
  7. #7

    Hi Scott!

    Wow man, that first image of the model really hits you square in the chest–outstanding shot! Can’t wait to see more (:

    Take Care!

    ~Issac

    Issac on August 11th, 2008 at 11:47 am
  8. #8

    Wow what a workshop. 4 photogs per time! That’s what I call one on one.

    Sounds like students learned a load. Wish we had more of those around here in WA. What we need is a workshop directory… hmmm

    Gav
    seimeffects.com

    Seim Effects on August 11th, 2008 at 12:57 pm
  9. #9

    I’ve been wanting to attend a Mary DuPrie workshop for a couple years now. Thanks for the overview. I think I’ll break down and purchase a DVD in the meantime.

    Ron on August 11th, 2008 at 1:28 pm
  10. #10

    The model shots are beautiful. I’d love to see the set-up, but I guess that will have to wait until I buy Mary’s DVD. Keep up to good work and I am looking forward to cracking open you Lightroom 2 book!

    Matt Durst Photography on August 11th, 2008 at 3:20 pm
  11. #11

    can you say kelby training - come on scott - hook us up - get her on : )

    Julie on August 11th, 2008 at 5:25 pm
  12. #12

    Scott,

    Just curious, why did you use the Nikon D300 when you have a D3?

    Thanks!

    Larry

    Larry Loar on August 11th, 2008 at 9:37 pm
  13. #13

    Just curious. I pre-ordered the new lightroom 2 book from Amazon and they have on their web site where I track my orders a delivery date of January 15, 2009. is that right or did they print the date wrong? Almost 6 months away?
    Terry

    Terry on August 11th, 2008 at 9:58 pm
  14. #14

    Hi Scott. This is probably not how I contact you but it’s all that I could find! I am photoshop beginer and I bought your book The Adobe Photoshop CS3 Book for Digital Photographers because I am going to be making photo books but I do not know how to open multiple photos at once to work on together?! When I click multiple photos they all open but I have to close one to work on the other. What I want to do is make different photo layouts for my books, like in the chapter “Simple three-photo balanced layout” but I just can’t get all the photos open at once! Can you help?!
    Thank you SO much!

    Alasha on August 11th, 2008 at 11:01 pm
  15. #15

    Dear Scott;

    Please let us know if you have covered the Adobe DNG Profile Editor in your new book: Lightroom 2.

    Thanks

    F. Sh. on August 12th, 2008 at 2:02 am
  16. #16

    Good for you , having all these workshops… :-)
    I went to Mary’s website… It looks great…
    One question… Did you like her DVD?

    Paulo Jordao Photography on August 12th, 2008 at 3:00 am
  17. #17

    Wow.. Awesome photo. Cheers from Stockholm, Sweden (soon will be Miami, Florida)

    Per on August 12th, 2008 at 3:35 am
  18. #18

    Hey Scott,

    Great lead shot! Slightly off topic question: I was looking at your “gear page” and noticed it says you have a “D3s”. Does that mean you have more than one D3, or are you test driving one of the “rumored” D3s prototypes?

    I’m also curious why you would use your D300 for the class when you have the D3(s).

    Chris Anthony on August 12th, 2008 at 7:44 am
  19. #19

    I believe it’s MacGyver. It took me a second to figure out who you were talking about. :)

    Dave on August 12th, 2008 at 10:08 am
  20. #20

    It seems to be a great workshop, I did my own background of flashes firing through holes but in photoshop, it makes a great effect, final result on my July 31th post.

    Ben Olivares on August 12th, 2008 at 1:33 pm
  21. #21

    @Dermot Murphy: My wife has just purchased LR 2. She tells me that in LR 2 you can embed a Collection within a Collection Set, and Collection Sets within other Collection Sets to several levels. That is equivalent to creating multiple level sub-collections in LR 1. Have you tried doing that in LR 2?

    M. Camembert on August 12th, 2008 at 10:07 pm
  22. #22

    Thanks M. Camembert!

    That worked!

    Much obliged.

    Dermot.

    Dermot Murphy on August 12th, 2008 at 11:48 pm
  23. #23

    Great write up of the workshop. It was a pleasure meeting and working with you. Nice capture! =)

    David on August 14th, 2008 at 10:15 am
  24. #24

    Scott, I’ve been working with continuous lights for the past few years and I really want to purchase strobes for my studio. I would love to know what you recommend I really need some help quickly. I will be photographing a one year old soon who probably will not be sitting still and I need to use a faster shutter speed then I have been using with my continuous lights. Please help me. I value your suggestions greatly. Also, do you know where I could get them quickly? Thanks.
    Christine

    christine derose on November 10th, 2008 at 8:51 am

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