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About Heath

It was a love of photography that inspired Heath Robbins to leave his job as an agency executive and travel the world with a camera in hand. More than twenty years later, it is his love for food, people, and making pictures, that continues to fuel his commercial photography career with focus and passion. For every client and for every shoot, Heath sets out to capture moments, tastes, and emotions that pull people out of their everyday, and straight into the moments that he creates.

 

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Location

One of the most fun aspects of what I do is making a location work for the image I want to create. I love transforming them with props styling and light. I think its too easy to use photoshop these days and manipulate everything and while I do use that tool I try whenever possible to create everything in camera. It's more fun and to me more rewarding.

The following pictures will show you a location I transformed for a shot I had in my mind - an actual "shotgun wedding". I originally got the idea after my assistant's wife got pregnant. Given how young she and Dan are (they were 22 now 23 with a strapping young son) and the fact that I have 2 daughters of my own; I started to joke about the shotgun I would buy to display for my girls' boyfriends when they started dating. One thing led to another and this picture started forming in my mind. About a month later my in house rep Jenna announced she was 3 months pregnant and I knew it was time to make this shot.

I spent the summer scouting a 30 mile radius around my house looking for the perfect barn. I wanted it to feel rural and I knew I wanted it to feel like the wedding was taking place at the last minute and as such had to be lit by the light on the barn itself. The barn style was one thing but what I really wanted was that light directly over their heads in a semi circle framing this impromptu event.

Turns out I found the barn three doors down from me in September at a neighbor's house that I had never visited. The problem was the barn had asphalt and lots of gravel at the entrance which didn't make it feel rural enough and the spotlight I could tell was too high up. We first tried putting a more powerful spot up there with a snoot to focus it (see Dan on the roof) but it was just a hopeful thought as the light wasn't strong enough to light my models the way I needed to.

But since the leaves were starting to fall off the trees and Jenna wasn't geting any less pregnant rather than try to find a new location I shifted to plan B: find and use an old pick up truck and use it's headlights. This in our pre-light still didn't give me the feel I wanted so I decided to make the barn interior my main light source and gelled three strobes and put them in the barn and used the truck to back light the bride. It gave me the perfect light/shadow balance I was looking for even if it wasn't from directly overhead. I then had to deal with the asphalt and gravel so we bought feed hay and spread it out over the entire area in front of the barn and then sprinkled (yes.. sprinkled) manure and dirt and mixed it in with the hay to make the ground look authentically "farm like".

I lways try to get more than one angle when I shoot and had always planned to move in and get the emotion of this "special moment" but because I didnt have my overhead light it made the angles I wanted difficult with this light set up. However, I found during my scouting that if I moved quickly (or should I say if my crew and I moved quickly because they had everything to do with the success of this shoot) we could get two shots in at twilight even if we had to move all the lights around.

So we planned for a second shot to be done from inside the barn. I adjusted the lights to balance the inside with outside and then put a large soft box to the side and above my models to get me that overhead light feel ( I just couldn't give up on that). From this angle I could get closer to the subjects so we could see the emotion on their faces. We actually rehearsed these set ups the week before and timed it with the sunset to get the feel I was looking for. As it turned out the sky on the pre-light day was better than on the actual shoot day. So the sky you see on this shot from the inside was actually from the pre-light day ( I said I prefer to not use photoshop... but the sky on that day simply didn't have the same drama)

And so you have it. The crew laughed the whole time we shot this. Probably nervous laughter that this should ever happen to one of us...

Reader Comments (2)

Wow, I LOVE this! The first shot is my favorite, the pick-up makes it perfect. It's great to hear the back story and set-up of the shot, really interesting. Found you from the article in Family Fun, really beautiful work!

April 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMeredith

I absolutely love it, when i see someone with such a passion for setting up a perfect shot.

Great image!

May 1, 2008 | Unregistered Commentern1x0n

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