
Hey folks, today I want to share some things specifically regarding shooting event photo booths. I’ve had about 30 of these gigs in the past two years.
What is an event photo booth? Basically a high turnaround, location photo studio. You can rock your SBs, your ABs, or your Profotos, but the point is you are using strobes to light your subjects. I’ll cover both the technical aspects and the social dynamics involved.
Here’s my typical equipment setup:

AB1600 through an octabox up front, AB800 back left barebulbed for the rimlight, and a gridspotted AB400 back right for the background light. Canon 5D, 35mm f1.4L, wireless transmitter/receiver hooked up to the key light, the rimlight and background light on slave mode.
The whole point of an EPB (event photo booth) is to create images with high production value using studio lighting. If you think about club lighting, it’s designed to quickly stimulate and give glimpses of people’s faces/bodies. Also, they are not nearly strong or consistent enough to properly expose a person. Sure you get some happy accidents and interesting artifacts, but it’s a guessing game. If you are a roaming event photographer, I highly recommend overpowering the ambient lights with your TTL flash setup.
I believe to be an effective booth photographer, one must be a decent studio photographer, meaning you must understand the basics of controlled light. Be confident enough that you can adapt to changing environments and make the best of what’s available. Attention to detail is not as demanding as studio work, but you don’t have the benefit of lots of test photos and prep time. You’ll have about 3-5 minutes to greet, pose, tweak settings, shoot, review, and repeat with a few different poses. It’s GREAT practice for learning how to direct people. In ballroom dance, we encourage new dancers to dance with as many different people as possible. Everyone has a slightly different lead, follow, style and personality. The same is true of being a versatile EPB photographer.
Be surgical and patient. Wait for people to get in the right spot. You’ll be much happier with fewer high quality shots than with tons of mediocre ones and hours of editing that come with it.

(Interacting with your subjects after the break)
(more…)
asd