First: Ballet instructor [REMBRANDT LIGHTING]
Second: Rock Sandy from Grease [SPLIT LIGHTING]
Third: Simply Sandy from Grease [PARAMOUNT LIGHTING]
Fourth: Classic book-store girl [LOOP LIGHTING]
This is the ballet instructor. I used a yellow top because I thought it gave the piece a lighter, not so serious feeling. I really like the smirk that she has, it gives it a different feeling.. not just and average head-shot. I decided to use rembrandt lighting for this look because it gave the piece a dramatic touch in contrast to the yellow top. Her hair is up and messy to give it a hard-working woman feel.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCra2ePODAOMmzzq9zp5rW36LvjbANJxFgCKtiuCR723W9rG8HSRKVDnFjvnnHSifVRaLzc-HUIon9XHij5dsVlY4F1HiXTHCeH0M93FAO4SnnpFrVx3wo2y7tJIj2lIshQHu7ssNGK2Hj/s1600/IMG_6605.JPG)
This is Sandy from the end of the movie Grease. I really wanted to show the contrast between Sandy from the beginning of the movie because split lighting and paramount seem to be almost opposites, just like Sandy's change in the movie. I used split lighting because it gave the piece the punk-rock touch that I was looking for. I used the off-the-shoulder top because it is similar to what Sandy was wearing in the movie and the shading on her collar bones gives the picture some detail so her hair had to be up. This was by far my favorite picture and was by far the hardest to accomplish.
This is the girly, naive Sandy from the beginning of Grease. I used paramount lighting because it was an overall girly piece about beauty. I chose the white top because it gave it a simple, much needed summer feel. Her hair is purposely curled at the bottom to depict Sandy's hairstyle from the 90s.
This is the book-store type girl, the type you would meet in a book store and talk for hours about her favorite book. It has a very average feeling to it and depicts a common-everyday girl. I used loop lighting because it was the most average.