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Table Of Contents

How To Use This Template 4

Production Countdown Checklist 5

The Great Photo Idea 6

The Story 7

Roles And Responsibilities Checklist 8

All Contact Details And Addresses 9

Contacts Details Of The People Involved 9

Addresses Of The Places Involved 10

Location Requirements Checklist 11

Styling Matrix 12

Carry On Luggage Checklist 13

Check In Luggage Checklist 14

Weather Forecast 15 Days Before Shooting 15

Location Visit Checklist 16

Day Before Shooting Checklist 17

Gear Checklist 18

Takeoff Checklist 19

The Holy Shooting Schedule 20

Ramp Up Step By Step List 21

List Of Frames To Produce In Each Scene 22

Varying Point Of View 23

Lighting Setup 24

Postproduction 25

Lessons Learned 26

Templates For Shooting Contracts / Model Releases 27

English Contract 27

English / Chinese Contract 27

English / German Contract 27

English / Japanese Contract 27

How To Use This Template

This template makes it super easy for us photographers, to come up with a solid and complete planning for a photo shooting. I used it several times now and with each iteration it is getting a little bit better and more complete.

Here’s how I use the template and how I suggest you use it, too:

First customize the template for a shoot. Start with the production countdown checklist on the next page. Go through the list and delete the lines which do not apply to the shooting you are planning. If you are not traveling to another country for a shooting, then obviously items like “get a visa” and “get vaccines” do not apply to you. Simply delete them.

Then go through the remaining chapters, remove everything that does not suite you this time.

Second, fill in the information you have. Start with your great shooting idea. Describe it. If it is not big yet, make it bigger. From there on go through the rest of the chapters and fill in everything you already got.

Thirdly, use the production countdown checklist to work on every aspect of the planning. You already wrote down your big shooting idea? Excellent, then tick off the first box (can be tricky in MS Word – I usually just replace it by an “x”. While you are at it, also tick off “start making a production book”. You just started it. Next thing is planning the location. Fill in your location requirements checklist, let your location scout come up with a suitable location, customize the location visit checklist and so on, until you can tick of the location planning checkbox.

Go on like this until the complete Production Countdown is ticket off. By that time you should be right in the middle of your well organized shooting, ready to take at least 3 killer exposures.

Have fun and…

Good light!
-- Michael ()


Production Countdown Checklist

o  12 Weeks Before – develop a big shooting idea

o  11 Weeks Before – start making a production book

o  9 Weeks Before – plan the location with your location scout

o  8 Weeks Before – define the roles of your staff

o  7 Weeks Before – define the scenes to shoot

o  7 Weeks Before – start working with your translator

o  6 Weeks Before – define props and fashion with your stylist

o  6 Weeks Before – define hairdo and makeup with makeup artist

o  6 Weeks Before – organize and align with models

o  6 Weeks Before – align with assistant

o  6 Weeks Before – get location permit

o  5 Weeks Before – book flights

o  5 Weeks Before – organize transport to location

o  5 Weeks Before – organize parking

o  5 Weeks Before – organize a fallback location/studio

o  4 Weeks Before – collect and distribute all contact details

o  4 Weeks Before – build the team

o  3 Weeks Before – test lighting ideas

o  3 Weeks Before – care about a studio as fallback

o  2 Weeks Before – check weather forecast

o  2 Weeks Before – make detailed shooting schedule

o  2 Weeks Before – align models, stylists and other team members

o  1 Week Before – go through preparation checklist

o  6 Days Before – buy props and stuff in home country

o  5 Days Before – check weather forecast again

o  4 Days Before – align on what models and stylists bring with them

o  3 Days Before – traveling to the destination

o  2 Days Before – check the location

o  2 Days Before – define where to put what on location

o  1 Days Before – go through preparation checklist again

o  1 Days Before – buy local props and things locally

o  Shooting Day – go through gear checklist

o  Shooting Day – follow the shooting schedule

o  Shooting Day – follow the shooting plan


The Great Photo Idea

This shooting is about…

The key statement that the photos make is…

I imagine the following scenes…

Some examples for photos like this are…


The Story

We will think of the shooting as taking photos of scenes from the following little story. This will help us to express a common mood and expression when it comes to setting up the scene, clothing and makeup, posting, lighting and all the other creative elements.

The main characters of our story is…. She is living in… One day she…


Roles And Responsibilities Checklist

Each team member is responsible for their tasks and for overcoming their challenges.

Role / Top Tasks, Responsibilities and Challenges / Casting / Result
Model / 1.  Have top body condition on day of shooting, good nails
2.  Sign release with complete transfer of all image rights incl. commercial
3.  …
4. 
Hair and Makeup Stylist / 1.  Care that the makeup is like planned and always perfect
2.  Care about the hair
3.  …
Fashion Stylist / 1.  Bring the clothes
2.  Closely align with hair and makeup stylist
3.  …
Location Scout / 1.  Care for a suitable location
2.  Deal with every obstacle on location
3.  …
Drivers/
Assistants / 1.  Be prepared with checked and filled up cars on day of shooting
2.  Know exactly the route to the location
3.  …
Translator / 1.  Capable of translation photoshooting related terms;
2.  Stay on my side all the time, and proactively translate whatever I say to whoever I address
3.  …

All Contact Details And Addresses

Contacts Details Of The People Involved

Model
/ Model
Makeup and Styling / Fashionstyling
Location Scout / Agent
Postproduction / Photographer
Other / Other


Addresses Of The Places Involved

Location
Address….

Hotel / Base
Address….

Markets/Shops for stuff needed
Address….

Fallback Location / Studio
Address….

Restaurant for dinner after the shooting
Address….

Location Requirements Checklist

Category / Requirement / Result
Type
Distance
Accessibility
Privacy
Legal
Examples

Styling Matrix

Category / Across Scenes / Scene #1 / Scene #2 / Scene #3 / Scene #4
Makeup style
Eyes
Lashes
Contacts
Cheeks
Lips
Hair
Others
Fashion
Accessories
Props
Examples

Carry On Luggage Checklist

o  passport incl. visa

o  production book

o  camera body

o  camera fallback body

o  camera battery chargers

o  lenses

o  memory cards

o  speedlights

o  laptop + charger

o  …


Check In Luggage Checklist

Photography items
o  camera tripod
o  laptop holder
o  guerilla pod
o  angle view finder
o  speedlight cables
o  snoot
o  color filters
o  light stands
o  umbrella swivels
o  umbrellas
o  reflectors
o  greycard
o  lens cleaning kit
o  gaffer tape
o  USB cable
o  GPS tracker
o  velcro
o  a piece of aluminum wrap
o  card reader
o  compass / Props for the shooting
o  wigs and similar
o  costumes
o  sunglasses etc
o  music for the shooting
Other items
o  clothes
o  toilet items
o  luggage strap


Weather Forecast 15 Days Before Shooting

According to the 15 day weather forecast of AccuWeather (http://zelbel.com/weather) the weather on location at the scheduled day of the shooting will be like this:

Temperatures:
Felt Temperature:

Wind:

Clouds / Rain:

Sunrise / Sunset:

Location Visit Checklist

Checkpoint / Result
Parking Space? Distance to set?
Electric power 220V available?
Restrooms?
Changingroom?
Retreat in case of rain?
Place to store gear?
Drinks, food, snacks available?
Where is the sun at the time of shooting? Where is it going to set?
Can the models pose conveniantly?
Mosquitoes, bugs?
Temperature at location?
Is it a public place? Viewers / spectators expected?
Can we play music?
Can we get in conflict with somebody?
Find the exact position for your shooting!
Make sample photos! Good exposures of sky, greenery, rocks, other elements of the compositions!
Is the location really suitable?

Day Before Shooting Checklist

o  camera batteries charged

o  memory cards clean

o  speedlight batteries charged

o  laptop battery charged

o  external battery charged

o  laptop hard drive got 20GB space

o  got music for the shooting

o  all participants have address and driving instructions

o  contracts are printed and ready to sign

o  weather forecast is OK

o  got drinks and food for the shooting


Gear Checklist

o  production book
o  camera body and batteries
o  fallback camera body and batteries
o  lenses
o  memory cards
o  tripod
o  lightstands
o  flashes
o  flash cables
o  snoots
o  color filters
o  umbrellas
o  angle view finder
o  laptop + external battery
o  USB cable
o  reflectors
o  graycard
o  GPS tracker
o  velcro
o  gaffer tape
o  aluminum wrap
o  lens cleaning kit
o  compass / o  bugspray
o  sunscreen
o  clothes
o  jewelry
o  wigs
o  smoke effects
o  drinks
o  fruit


Takeoff Checklist

Things to check before we start driving to our location

o  equipment checklist checked

o  clocks in Laptop and cameras on local time

o  cameras zero’d out and working

o  GPS tracker got space and is running

o  cars are filled up and driver knows the way


The Holy Shooting Schedule

We absolutely MUST stick to the following schedule on the day of the shooting

Shedule, [Date…]


aa:00 – bb:00 Drive to location
bb:00 – cc:00 Prepare Scene #1, Makeup
cc:00 – dd:00 Shoot Scene #1
dd:00 – ee:00 Shoot Scene #2
ee:00 – ff:00 Shoot Scene #3
ff:00 Pack up the stuff an leave Location


Ramp Up Step By Step List

List of activities to be done directly after arriving on location

1.  Mark the exact spot where we shoot the first scene by putting a bucket there

2.  Park the cars as close as possible

3.  Models oil their skin

4.  Everybody use bugspray

5.  Setup the camera tripod for the first scene

6.  Setup camera, check the main settings

7.  Attache remote trigger, angle viewfinder, pocket wizard

8.  Tether with laptop

9.  Setup the lightstands with the main light and the kicker light, just place them somewhere

10.  Compose the geometry of the scene, probably with an assistant posing

11.  Place the lightstands at the correct position

12.  Adjust the power of the main light

13.  Adjust the power of the kicker light

14.  You are ready to go, shoot your first scene

List Of Frames To Produce In Each Scene

List of the frames we shoot in each scene.

Before the model enters the scene:

1.  Available light exposure

2.  Optimum Sky exposure

3.  Grey Cube

4.  mainlight switched on

5.  all lights switched on

6.  lighting setup documentation


With the model

7.  First making-of photos

8.  Makeup test portait

9.  Model speaking her text

10.  Model right after speaking

11.  Model turned her head*

12.  Creatively improvised

13.  Details, closeups

14.  Second making-of photos


Varying Point Of View


During

POV 1:

POV 2:

POV 3:


Lighting Setup


Here are some scribbles (probably made online with (http://zelbel.com/diagram) for the lighting setup for our different scenes:

….


Postproduction

For postproduction the following is planned

o  Stretch photo by 5%

o  Make eyes 5% bigger

o  Rubberstamp pimples and spots

o  Make skin smoother

o  sharpen

o  …


Lessons Learned

In our shooting the following thing went wrong, or can be improved. I will add checkpoints and planning steps to the production book of the NEXT shooting, so that these things cannot come up again:

Issue 1

Issue 2


Templates For Shooting Contracts / Model Releases

There is another version of this template that comes with the Beijing Blueprint eBook. That version contains also some model release contract templates.

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©2010 by the photographer