School Portraits
I am going to be shooting school portraits for a small school. They actually use some type of software...not sure what to build the yearbook themselves. I will be selling packages to help raise funds....I plan to give the yearbook staff a copy of the photos on cd. I want to know if I have to do anything different or if the yearbook software will resize for those tiny little pictures?
Thanks
Thanks
0
Comments
I guess it really depends on what they are using. I did the photos and yearbook for my daughter's school last year and used Blurb.com. I was able to just drag and drop from either iphoto or smugmug, and the software resized to fit the template.
Caroline
My Photos
Thoughts on photographing a wedding, How to post a picture, AF Microadjustments?, Light Scoop
Equipment List - Check my profile
Here are a couple that I took today at my preschool. I used my D300, SB600, Softliter II with diffuser. I had to keep running from the sun all day. I think I shot something like 80 kids. I had a max of 5 minutes per kid, and I try to get at least three decent shots. I get to do it all again tomorrow! Then, I'll have big kids on Friday when I do my daughters' school (pre-k through 8th grade).
#1
#2
#3
#4
#5
#6
Caroline
If I may, I would maybe suggest you get down on their level a little more. The "looking down on them" perspective is not as interactive as when the camera is more nearly on level with their eyes. You have a couple of examples of each in the set above - just for comparison.
My Photos
Thoughts on photographing a wedding, How to post a picture, AF Microadjustments?, Light Scoop
Equipment List - Check my profile
Thanks, Scott,
I agree about getting down on the kids' level (I teach preschool after all). I usually try shots from a few different perspectives with each kid. Different kids will respond better to different angles. Yesterday, I was also trying to be mindful of sun in the background, so I had to shoot more with that downward angle than I usually like to . Our location was the courtyard at the church preschool where I teach, so we were limited when it came to finding good shade. All in all, I'd still rather do these outside than set up a mini studio inside. A lot of young children find the studio set up intimidating, and the parents like how different it is to have school portraits done outside.
Anyway, today I shoot more and I'll work harder at taking more shots on child level. Thanks for the input!
Caroline
Blogs:
www.imagesbyshane.blogspot.com
Canon 20d and 40d
Canon 50mm 1.4
Canon 85mm 1.8
Canon 70-200L IS 2.8
Looks like you are on your way.
Cheers
Dave
http://www.daveclee.com
Nikon D3 and a bunch of nikkor gear
that has added up over the years :wink
I know, those poor little fingers! Usually I crop those down into headshots before parents view them. I also take some a little further out. It's tough work when I have such a short time with each kid. This is the second year I've done the bulk school photo thing. It ends up being pretty good money, and I have fun, but I don't think I could do more than the two schools I already do. Okay, maybe if I quit my teaching job.
Thanks for the comments. I hope my posts are helpful to those who are just starting with the school portraits. I'm definitely in the trial and error phase.
Caroline