Tianna j williams

4 min read

LIGHTING MASTERCLASS

Lighting secrets of the pros:

Tianna swapped a career as a midwife to pursue her dream of becoming a pro photographer and has since won numerous awards for her portraits

Model @gloryeselojor photographed on a shoot with Simon Lewis Nikon Z6, 50mm f/1.2

Back in 2017 Tianna J Williams left behind the responsibility of bringing new life into the world for the challenge of the selfemployed life of a photographer. Starting out with nothing more than a passion for photography, her photographic journey has taken her from shooting in her living room to creating beautiful portraits in her spacious studio in one of the trendiest areas in Birmingham.

Initially dabbling in different genres, it was a masterclass she took in 2018 that reminded her of her underlying passion for women and convinced Tianna to use her experience as a midwife to leverage her business as a maternity session specialist.

Tianna has built a multi-award-winning practice specialising in maternity photography, empowering her clients through beautiful portraits that capture their journey from pregnancy through to motherhood. Many of her clients return once the baby has arrived, to carry on the traditions of memory-making.

Now a Nikon Creator, Tianna’s work is also increasingly encompassing a broader portfolio of portraiture beyond the maternity sphere.

In her downtime, Tianna spends a lot of time exploring creative lighting and styling techniques that she can use on her clients. In December she embarked on a collaborative project with a friend and fellow photographer Simon Lewis, armed with a mood-board, an incredible model, backdrops and the intention to create something great. This is one of Tianna’s images from that shoot, and below she explains how it was made. Over the page Tianna shares the lighting set-ups behind several of her other images.

This portrait, of Glory Eselojor, was lit using an Elinchrom ELC500 monobloc flash, modified with the 150cm Indirect Octa as the key light and positioned in an ‘almost’ paramount position. Paramount lighting, also known as butterfly lighting, is recognisable for the ‘butterfly wing’ shaped shadow under the nose. The light is usually above the client, feathered or angled towards them. It is a popular style used by Paramount Studios (hence the name) and by many beauty and portrait photographers today. A 130x50cm strip box was also used to provide some separation from the background and slightly illuminate her hair. My Click Props triflector was placed low down in front of her for fill (see photo, left).

KIT LIST

Nikon Z 6II

As an upgrade from my D750, I noticed a significant difference in the dynamic range, colours, contrast, speed and the AF, with no compromise in quality.

Nikon Z 50mm f/1.2 S

My lens of choice currently, for portraits as well as other genres. It

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