Shoot Type: Graduation Premium
Time: 8PM – late
Location(s): Indoors & outdoors
Gear: Sony A7R V, lenses (50mm, 85mm, 105mm), three-light setup
Focus: Playing with Dynamic Range Optimization (DRO) for night shooting
Not gonna lie—I still don’t fully know what DRO is technically. But I know what it does.
When it’s on, I can shoot at lower ISOs at night, and everything’s just lit up better—subject looks crisp without blowing up the background.
For Sony: Find it under Exposure/Color > Color/Tone > DRO
I keep it on Level 5 when shooting outdoors at night
Don't use it indoors (can make it harder to control the background brightness)
It’s not a necessity, but it helps a ton if you already know your nighttime settings and just want that extra edge. Same logic as tools like Evoto—learn the craft first, then automate the grunt work.
Lighting: Standard 3-light setup
One angled overhead
One fill off to the side
One hidden backlight (for subject pop)
Camera Settings (indoor):
ISO 100
Shutter Speed: 1/80 → 1/200 (adjusted for background darkening)
Aperture: 1.4 – 1.8 depending on lens
Flash Power:
Key: 1/64
Fill: 1/128 (+0.7)
Back: 1/64 (adjust as needed)
🔁 Constantly adjusting lighting, moving boxes, flipping angles to work with the space (not against it).
Big lenses = respect 😂
People don’t know what you’re using, but if it looks expensive—they listen.
Always bring music. Keeps energy up and people comfortable.
Engage your subject: “Smile. Look away. Tilt your chin. Pop the knee.”
Direct every movement with confidence.
Be human. We went over time, waited on folks, and just made it work.
Being nice gets you booked again.
Did same shots, same settings, toggled DRO on/off:
With DRO: subject glows, background stays manageable
Without DRO: needs more light, can get noisy
One downside: DRO can brighten the background more than I want, which makes it hard to isolate the subject sometimes. But still—worth using if you know how to adjust for it.
Y’all, study the setups. Where I place lights, what settings I use, how I talk to the client.
Take notes. Zay literally pulled up with a whole notepad of settings he jotted down from past vids.
Don’t just copy—tweak, mix, and master it to match your style and situation.