I want to get better at portraits and so I'm curious what you think of this one.
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This is a discussion on Heather at Lawrencetown Beach within the Critiques forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; I want to get better at portraits and so I'm curious what you think of this one....
I want to get better at portraits and so I'm curious what you think of this one.
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Very nice Iggy. Pretty girl, your daughter I suppose. I'm not to knowledgeable on giving critiques but the only thing I see is it would have been nice to get the sunlight off her nose and left side of lower face and adding a little more on the bottom of the picture. Otherwise I like it real well.
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my blog: http://bambesblog.blogspot.com/
My flickr photostream: http://www.flickr.com/photos/bambe1964/
A painter takes their vision and makes it a reality. A photographer takes reality and makes it their vision.
I like it. I'm huge on having some shadow, and natural lighting, but I work with my wife, and she is all about making things more "mainsream." I made some very, VERY tiny alterations in photoshop to please the "more even lighting" crowd, without (hopefully) taking away from the artistic vision of the original, which I like just fine WITHOUT any alterations. I only did this because of your "Feel Free to Edit" tag. I will delete it if you ask me to.
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Thanks, Lorey. I'm a little confused about how to get the light to be part of the shoot but not overpower the image.
Thanks, Matt. I hadn't actually gone out with the idea of shooting any portraits so I never thought to take anything I could use as a reflector. I guess it's not very visible but I actually used my on-camera flash as fill flash.
Thanks, Bambi.
Nope, that's exactly why that feature is there, I'm always open to editing any of my shots within the site for educational purposes. Nicely done, I like your results! I just don't have those kind of skills which is why I have to work a little harder to get it right in camera![]()
Iggy, I have ran into this same situation before. Sometimes I can fix it and sometimes not. I would have tried having her turn her head maybe just enough to where the light didn't hit her face. But that may have taken away the lighting effect on her hair too much. If the light is low enough, and it looked like it might have been here, and I have some one else there I have them stand just in the right place out of the frame to block the sun where needed or hold a hand or something up to block the light. I once had someone hold up a jacket to block harsh light in the subject's face. Course I wasn't there and maybe none of those things were possible or would have worked. Just some ideas and suggestions you might use if possible in the future. But i do like mellowinman's fix.
Photoshop is the only processing program I use these days. I selected your subject's face, and did a "replace color." Then I used the eyedrop to make the paint color the same as her dominant skin tone, and used the paintbrush to take away some shadows and puffiness from beneath the eyes. I overdid it a bit, and then selected the entire image, and pasted it over your original. Then I chose the percentage of transparency just by using my eye. I tried to find that compromise between a little "better" lighting, and the nice, natural look you had. I think it took out too many freckles, though. I have a bad back, so I can only work on the computer for a limited time; otherwise, I would put hours and hour into it, until it looked "just right."
Lighting is definitely the area that might benefit from some additional work. A fill flash would have illuminated the face more equally, with the side light highlighting the hair. Or even just a reflector on the right would have enhanced the job. From a composition and expression this is really nice, though.
~~ Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder ~~
No time to read through all the others comments so forgive me repeating anything said before.
Nice choice of background but I would have had the horizon away from her face ... so either cutting through her shoulder or neck, OR, up high in her forehead.
If you're serious about better portraits (maybe you just meant snapshot type portraits?) then little things like wayward hairs are worth dealing with. Mostly those that protrude down into her face and eye areas.
It looks like some fill flash was used but don't be shy Iggy ... fire that sucker up and try some strong fill as well. You might be surprised at the result in a case like this where strong shadows are present.
Turning her slightly more to HER left might have shaded her face entirely from the sun and created some back/side light through her hair too.
Apart from that, maybe go for a specific emotion or feel. Coy, happy, sad, sexy, whatever, anything other than ... well ... not much at all if you get my drift.
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