So you’ve got your basement studio all set up with lights, camera,
tripod and a plain white background. Great. Wouldn’t it be terrific if
you could add one of those beautiful muslin backgrounds you see in the
catalogs and used
by the big studios? Yeah, right. Seven hundred dollars for one.
Here’s a method to make a background of your own design at a cost of
under twenty dollars.
First decide how you would like your background to look. Find a
greeting card or postcard you like. It could be a forest of trees with
sunlight slanting to the ground, a quiet lake scene, pine trees under a
new fall of snow, an old fashioned garden in France or even a picture
of yours that you love.
Make a slide or viewgraph transparency of
your selection and prepare the surface for the artwork. An old
king-sized sheet will do very nicely or you can use the wall itself. If
using the sheet, stretch it firmly on the wall and project the
transparency on it. Make sure the projector is firmly supported and
square to the wall. Mark the position with tape in case it moves. Using
a charcoal stick, trace in all the edges of the picture on the wall. If
a removeable background is desired, stretch a king size white or light
gray or beige sheet on the wall. Make sure it is firmly attached since
you w will be drawing on it later.
Buy a gallon of white ceiling
paint (for its matte surface) and some tubes of color. Mix enough paint
of the needed colors in a few plastic buckets. With a two inch brush,
paint the picture on the wall, using the photograph as a guide. You
don’t have to be an artist since the rendition should be loose and a
water color like representation of the chosen subject. Avoid using
black or very dark colors and tone down any brightly hued colors with
white or gray paint. If the scene is to portray a high key effect, one
further step is recommended. Mix some white paint with an equal amount
of water and roll or brush on a semi transparent layer over the dry
painting.
If a more classic look is wanted, you may skip the
transparency and paint right on the sheet or wall. Start in the lower
center with beige and light gray
and work your way toward the edges, mixing the colors on the wall
using veridian/brown, alarizen red/brown and brown/dark blue. These
colors are sure to compliment skin tones. Use a four inch brush with
either a diagonal stroke for the whole background or a quarter moon
shaped overlapping brush stroke. Work fast, using the darker colors
toward the edges. One warning: never go back to correct an effect after
the paint has partially dried. One advantage of the classic background
is that the edges can be extended around the corners of the room,
allowing larger subjects to be photographed. The character of your
unusual and beautiful background will be limited only by your
imagination.
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