My 1st Portrait Job
SoonerShawn
Registered Users Posts: 128 Major grins
I was asked by a friend from church if I would mind taking some shots of her daughter for her Sr. Pictures, having never done any portrait stuff, I hesitated to do it, but thought it would be a great opportunity for me to learn on a willing subject who was not real picky. Here are a few shots from a couple of the settings. Please let me know what you think. The only way to learn is to hear from the best, so give me your critiques.
The last shot was just a fun shot we wanted to play with. Doesn't work too good for Sr. Photo but something I thought we could use in a photo book.
All images taken with:
Nikon D3
50mm 1.4 lens
Natural light
The last shot was just a fun shot we wanted to play with. Doesn't work too good for Sr. Photo but something I thought we could use in a photo book.
All images taken with:
Nikon D3
50mm 1.4 lens
Natural light
0
Comments
#1 Nice DOF and good focus on her eyes. That 'looking up' pose is very flattering to many people. It seems a little dark, though, to me.
#2 This one doesn't do it for me, but I can't articulate why - whether it's the crop or the angle - but it seems less flattering. Perhaps a 3/4 crop instead?
#3 & #4 are nice although, again, #4 seems a little dark.
#5 I would have really liked a lot if she'd stood up a little straighter as opposed to rounding her shoulders forward and down.
#6 nice concept but what's the focus - her or the cross?
All this said - I'm a beginning photographer so take it for what it's worth
http://www.imagesbyceci.com
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Picadilly, NB, Canada
1 and 5 are probably my favorite. She looks very relaxed and the poses don't seem forced. I don't like the pose and crop on #2. Doesn't seem natural. Her face is very pretty in that shot as is the hair blowing in her face so maybe crop in a bit tighter on her face.
The last one with the crop is nice but I would suggest you try brightening her up a bit, but do so locally so the rest stays the same. I think it will really make that a nice capture.
Good job though.
Moderator of the People and Go Figure forums
My Smug Site
http://blog.timkphotography.com
I think #2 could have been something if the wind hadn't been blowing and if the camera were angled ever so slightly...
GREAT job! Thanks for sharing as now I've learned some new posing techniques!
Marjohn
Images of Him Photography
Love the bluebonnets- haven't found a great patch yet. I take that back, I found a lovely patch of bluebonnets at the wrong time and not at a location I would normally have access to. The other wildflowers were to die for, as well.
Caroline
D40
18 - 55 kit lens
55- 200 VR kit lens
Lots of desires
My faves, 1,2,4,5. Awesome! She must be very happy with these. She is beautiful.
Comments and constructive criticism always welcome.
www.mikejulianaphotography.com
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stefanochoi.com
Thanks Tim...I agree with everything you said. I'm just not real good with the dodge and burn tool yet. I need to work on it. I appreciate your ideas. I'll play with it some more and see if I can make it better.
Comments and constructive criticism always welcome.
www.mikejulianaphotography.com
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Unless you have photoshop CS4, don't use the actual dodge and burn tools. They suck in the older versions. It's like painting over your image with a low opacity white or black brush. A better way to do it is to create a new curves layer. Drag the curve down until the sky looks just as dark as you want it to be. Everything else will get way too dark but only worry about the sky for now. Click ok to close the box. Now the curves layer will have a layer mask already but it's filled with white so nothing is actually masked. Get the paint bucket and fill the layer mask with black. Now everything will be hidden and the photo will look like what you started with. Now take a white paint brush and start painting in the areas that you want to be darker. Wherever you paint with white will reveal the effects of the darkening curves layer, and it will still look like the same colors that were in your original shot, just darker, as if you underexposed the shot a bit. Use a soft edged larger brush so that there are not hard edges to the mask that show up. Now you can use the same method to dodge the areas that you want brighter. Just open up a curves layer but this time drag the curve up until things are as bright as you want them to be. Then mask it and paint in the bright areas the same way you painted the dark areas in before. If this seems complicated, just try it out; you'll get the hang of it quickly once you play around a bit. It's simple once you "get it" but it's a very, very powerful tool to have in your box. (Sorry if you know about curves and layer masks already, I wasn't sure. Even if you do, maybe someone else reading this will benefit. Learning layer masks is pretty much the key that opens the gate to photoshop success in my opinion.)
http://blog.timkphotography.com
Original
Warmed slightly and adjusted plus 1 stop exposure with added contrast...
Educate yourself like you'll live forever and live like you'll die tomorrow.
Ed
1) Great Shot
2)I would crop more off the bottom.
3)Grat Shot
4)The jeans in the bottom left distract me a bit.
5)I wish her arm was on the front side of the rail/pole.
6)Love it
Take Care,
Charles,
Aperture Focus Photography
http://aperturefocus.com