
Dass-7

Dass-8

Dass-1

Dass

Dass-2

Dass-6

Dass-3

Dass-4

My thanks to the lovely model


Also, I know, the light is CRAP. We were supposed to start at 9AM but complications arose. That resulted is us starting only at 12.
a quickr pickr post
Moderator: Beowulf
The more comfy looking shots were boring alass, or she didn't want me to upload them. (she's a good friend of mine, so I gave her veto rights).Bounty wrote:She doesn't really look comfortable in all but a few of the pictures.
Nope. Almost every shot (except for the head shots against the black fabric) were with a 30mm Prime in fact.Where these supposed to be mainly headshots?
Lots of locations actually. Which photos/location are you talking about?Cause you had a really nice location but it seems like you had your camera right in her face most of the time.
LOL. Probably notAnd your model looks eerily like someone I used to know. She's not half-Italian by any chance, is she?
Not that it's a problem, but photos aren't defined by the kind of lens they were shot with. They're headshots taken with a normal. They would be just as headshotty with a tele of any length, or a proper wide.Death wrote:Nope. Almost every shot (except for the head shots against the black fabric) were with a 30mm Prime in fact.
Width wise it's fineSimplicius wrote:Hokay, first off - no need for these to be so damn big. Rule #1.5 of presenting photos is make sure you can see the whole thing in one go. Gallery wall? Knock yourself out. Computer monitor? Keep it inside the boundaries of the screen, please.
Believe me i'm painfully aware of it. There were external constraints that fucked up the schedule.Second - major lighting fail. You acknowledge as much, but I don't think the importance of good lighting for portraits can be understated.
True, bright morning light suited this girl more than warm golden late day light, but external constraints applied (I have studies in the evening).Light is always important, but for portraits it's especially so because of how it affects the shape(s) of a face, the color and texture of skin, and the characterization of the subject. Even 'always good' early morning light would have been completely inadequate unless it 'said' precisely what you wanted to say about the person you are photographing.
The limits of my studio is a bunch of black fabric I bought from a seamstress last week. I'd rather work with constraints than not do anything, especially due to how lacking my portrait skills, techniques, repertoire and ideas are.There's a reason most portraits are done in studio: control.
I am a total noobUnless you are a total noob and your model is experienced, you should be directing the shoot.
I lack a purpose other than practice, and trying to get better at this. People pictures are my weak point, I lack any sort of sympathy, empathy or interest in people, hence my need to improve at it. Why do you think that I was going for a candid look? (I wasn't).The key in either case is purpose. There is no need to try and pretend that a posed portrait is candid, so make sure that you get what you want out of a shoot. "Photos of [model]" is never it.
Link is broken.http://jzportraits.home.att.net/ is a good reference for classic studio portraiture. It's as good a place to start as any.
... Have you seen what happens when you take a close up head only shot with a 30mm lens? (I took a couple. I like them for their amusement value, but she looks very weird and gaping due to the distortion)Not that it's a problem, but photos aren't defined by the kind of lens they were shot with. They're headshots taken with a normal. They would be just as headshotty with a tele of any length, or a proper wide.Death wrote:Nope. Almost every shot (except for the head shots against the black fabric) were with a 30mm Prime in fact.
(Before you say "wuh buh it's a wide lens," my 28mm can focus down to 0.4 meter, which should be plenty adequate to fill the frame with a face.)
Apart from the purely technical stuff, I think this is a major problem. How can you take good pictures of something you don't care about? If you can't see the beauty or the appeal of a scene - you know, the very reason why you press the shutter button - how do you expect to get good pictures?I lack any sort of sympathy, empathy or interest in people
The joys of being an autistBounty wrote:Apart from the purely technical stuff, I think this is a major problem.I lack any sort of sympathy, empathy or interest in people
Same way I learned social skills. Through focus, practice and continual improvement.How can you take good pictures of something you don't care about?
Practice.If you can't see the beauty or the appeal of a scene - you know, the very reason why you press the shutter button - how do you expect to get good pictures?
I used to be reeeaaaaallly bad at people pics. I improved from that, and now i'll improve some more. Defeatist attitudes never helped anyone (Except for risk assessment insurance company surveyors).If you don't give a shit about people, don't do portraits.
No, that's just personal reasons. (Hopefully i'll be better at calming down the item of photography next time).I'll bet this is why she looks so awkward in most of these shots; it's all posed for the sake of being posed, there's no real life in it.
Roundabout jury-rigged fixes never helped anyone, either. Not in the long term.Defeatist attitudes never helped anyone
And I find it condescending and insulting that you think you can tell me how I've lived my life, gone through therapy and learned social skills over the past few years.Bounty wrote: (by the way, this idea you can learn social skills through 'focus and practice'? That is seriously creepy and incredibly condescending)
Play-acting at being a human being is not the same as 'learning social skills'. I can't tell what sort of progress you've made, I can only comment on what you say here, and the way you keep banging on about how you can solve every problem with repetition and mimicking doesn't give me much hope.One of us is autistic, and one of us learned social skills. It's not you.
Progress in what? Your statement is unclear to me.Bounty wrote:Play-acting at being a human being is not the same as 'learning social skills'. I can't tell what sort of progress you've madeOne of us is autistic, and one of us learned social skills. It's not you.
The other thing to keep in mind is that artificial lighting works outside as well as inside, so you woulds still benefit from reading up that that sort of thing. Fill flash, reflectors, etc. aren't going to compete with the sun but they will still let you work with multidirectional lighting.The Grim Squeaker wrote:True, bright morning light suited this girl more than warm golden late day light, but external constraints applied (I have studies in the evening).
Next shot will have the right light for the shot though, assuming the model in question ever has a free evening.
Yeah, I'm not saying "Don't bother unless you've got a studio." Just noting the importance of what a studio can offer in my general portrait photo spiel.The limits of my studio is a bunch of black fabric I bought from a seamstress last week. I'd rather work with constraints than not do anything, especially due to how lacking my portrait skills, techniques, repertoire and ideas are.
Purpose for the photos, I mean. Do you want your model to look fun? Sexy? Dignified? Beautiful? Bizarre? The model's pose, garb, and the background of the photo will shape a story - what story do you want to tell? This should be part of what you practice.I lack a purpose other than practice, and trying to get better at this.
I don't. I was speaking up in favor of assertive and purposeful direction, since some of these pictures looked like the direction was weak.Why do you think that I was going for a candid look? (I wasn't).
Works fine for me. Try searching for "The Zeltsman Approach to Traditional Classic Portraiture." It's a 16-chapter web page by a career portrait photographer talking about his methods.Link is broken.
I need to find a portable mirror and white foam board(s). Not as easy to find as one would think, oddly enough.Simplicius wrote:The other thing to keep in mind is that artificial lighting works outside as well as inside, so you woulds still benefit from reading up that that sort of thing. Fill flash, reflectors, etc. aren't going to compete with the sun but they will still let you work with multidirectional lighting.The Grim Squeaker wrote:True, bright morning light suited this girl more than warm golden late day light, but external constraints applied (I have studies in the evening).
Next shot will have the right light for the shot though, assuming the model in question ever has a free evening.
I did one shoot in astudio as part of the photo course I did. Fill flashes are fuuuunYeah, I'm not saying "Don't bother unless you've got a studio." Just noting the importance of what a studio can offer in my general portrait photo spiel.The limits of my studio is a bunch of black fabric I bought from a seamstress last week. I'd rather work with constraints than not do anything, especially due to how lacking my portrait skills, techniques, repertoire and ideas are.
It's quite an expense, and I can't really justify it or afford it (I'm not making money of this, I need a body of experience currently, if I manage to work for someone then real studio experience will follow).Keep your eyes out for studios that hire out time to photographers, kind of like how public darkrooms do.
Not just expense, also time, space and technical ability.I think that's a great way for someone to get to practice real studio work without having to justify the expense of setting up a full one for one's self.
Thanks, that's a good tip for guiding the next time I work at it.Purpose for the photos, I mean. Do you want your model to look fun? Sexy? Dignified? Beautiful? Bizarre? The model's pose, garb, and the background of the photo will shape a story - what story do you want to tell? This should be part of what you practice.I lack a purpose other than practice, and trying to get better at this.
You're saying i'm not charismatic or forceful enough?I don't. I was speaking up in favor of assertive and purposeful direction, since some of these pictures looked like the direction was weak.Why do you think that I was going for a candid look? (I wasn't).
Found it. reading it now, thanks!Works fine for me. Try searching for "The Zeltsman Approach to Traditional Classic Portraiture." It's a 16-chapter web page by a career portrait photographer talking about his methods.Link is broken.
Fuck off bounty. Those of us with aspergers who actually have learned to be functional members of society all had to consciously learn social skills and behaviours until they came naturally.The Grim Squeaker wrote:And I find it condescending and insulting that you think you can tell me how I've lived my life, gone through therapy and learned social skills over the past few years.Bounty wrote: (by the way, this idea you can learn social skills through 'focus and practice'? That is seriously creepy and incredibly condescending)
One of us is autistic, and one of us learned social skills. It's not you.
Oh boo-fucking-hoo. First off, 'those of us with aspergers' is a pretty fucking meaningless group considering any nerd who's afraid of people gets the label from the sympathy brigade these days, including yours truly.JointStrikeFighter wrote:Fuck off bounty. Those of us with aspergers who actually have learned to be functional members of society all had to consciously learn social skills and behaviours until they came naturally.The Grim Squeaker wrote:And I find it condescending and insulting that you think you can tell me how I've lived my life, gone through therapy and learned social skills over the past few years.Bounty wrote: (by the way, this idea you can learn social skills through 'focus and practice'? That is seriously creepy and incredibly condescending)
One of us is autistic, and one of us learned social skills. It's not you.
Because all those psychiatrists and councilors who spend their lives helping kids with that have completely the wrong idea!Bounty wrote:(by the way, this idea you can learn social skills through 'focus and practice'? That is seriously creepy and incredibly condescending)
I don't want this to get lost in the social-skills hijack. It's similar to what I said earlier about telling a story, but gets closer to the general reasons for making photographs (or any creative pastime) at all.Bounty wrote:Think about why you want to make portraits. I get the impression you do it because you feel it's something you should do and that's pretty much the worst way to start. What is special about your subject? What catches your eye? What's the emotion you want to portray? Don't think about light or lenses or any of that crap - think about the idea you want to see on paper and let the rest flow from there.
I gotta emphasise this and add my own personal story of failure. In my case I've never been able to take good portraits or still life pictures, I've tried working on it a few times over the years but it never gets anywhere. My portraits today suck just as much as the ones I took 15 years ago, it just doesn't work and I've accepted it. It's futile and frustrating, I'm doing photography as a hobby not a job so if it's not fun then what the fuck am I doing it for? So I let me wife take them, because she can actually take decent ones while I focus on fun stuff like mountain bike action photos.Simplicius wrote:There is no reason to feel that to be a photographer you have to at least dabble in all possible genres of photography. To do so is to waste your time, since every minute you reluctantly struggle to grasp the fundamentals of landscape is a minute you are not out getting better at making the kinds of pictures you like to make. It's important to base your work off your own desires and interests. Not only will you cheerfully work hard at something you love to do, and therefore become better at it, but the self-satisfaction you derive from it will reward you in the absence of money and fame.
I've never done any good pictures of people that involved me moving/ordering them around, only spontaneous/candid shots work. (The model shoot I did in the photography course was CRAP. I stank at it, and that was with a studio set up and a professional model).aerius wrote:
I gotta emphasise this and add my own personal story of failure. In my case I've never been able to take good portraits or still life pictures, I've tried working on it a few times over the years but it never gets anywhere.
Goddamn you're oldMy portraits today suck just as much as the ones I took 15 years ago
That may be the case with me as well. (It certainly feels like it. I'm just really bad at it, from the artistic to the practical to the human aspects)., it just doesn't work and I've accepted it.
To be great at something you enjoy and love?It's futile and frustrating, I'm doing photography as a hobby not a job so if it's not fun then what the fuck am I doing it for?
That, and hot girls find it easier to get random people to pose and relax for them. (sad but true).So I let me wife take them, because she can actually take decent ones while I focus on fun stuff like mountain bike action photos.
If it wasn't for digital's 0$ per shot expense, I wouldn't be where I am today in terms of ability or experience. If there was even a minimal cost, I wouldn't do a tenth of my photography, certainly not random small stuff or random experimentations.At the same time I do think you need to experiment with new stuff every now & then, especially now that we have digital cameras which makes it practically free.
That's always awesome (and you live in Toronto you bastard, that's an Awesome place for building shots). I'd work more on improving sports photography in your place though, you have a lot of potential with that, and you have number of friends in it, talk to them, and make some promo shots that they can print for their friends and family.For instance I've never done architecture photography until this year, but now that I have I think it's pretty damn fun to bike around town and find cool buildings to takes pictures of.
You're right! I've been conned! I could have done it anyway!RRoan wrote:Because all those psychiatrists and councilors who spend their lives helping kids with that have completely the wrong idea!Bounty wrote:(by the way, this idea you can learn social skills through 'focus and practice'? That is seriously creepy and incredibly condescending)
That being said, I can't say I know your story, but that really is what it comes down to for a lot of people. Therapy's sure as hell helped me.
True. Realizing it and focusing on solving it has helped (me at least).The rest of your post is pretty much spot on though; using it as an excuse never helped anybody.
Go fuck yourself, dipshit. There are plenty of people who have been professionally diagnosed, not just geeks on the Internet using the term as an excuse for poor social skills.Bounty wrote:Oh boo-fucking-hoo. First off, 'those of us with aspergers' is a pretty fucking meaningless group considering any nerd who's afraid of people gets the label from the sympathy brigade these days, including yours truly.
You're a goddamned idiot. Did you know that there are children who don't even know to smile when they're happy? They have to be taught things like "smile when you're happy" and "frown when you're upset": things that come naturally to most of us. They have to practice these things. You're making broad declarations about how "nobody" legitimately has these serious developmental disorders and they're just whiners, based on ... what, exactly? Your personal opinion? And what is that worth, compared to case studies proving the exact opposite?Second, the ridiculous idea that you need to 'learn' social 'skills' that come 'naturally' to others is feel-good bullshit for people who just develop them late. Nobody is born with perfect social skills, everybody learns them through interaction and some are better at it than others. Do I have sympathy and patience for someone who is insecure around people and awkward but tries anyway? Sure. Do I have sympathy for self-aggrandising nerds who think they can milk respect from people by whining about how they are shit around people, pathetically trying to quantify and analyse social interaction with 'tricks' and 'systems'? Yeah, fuck that.
You should be more sorry about being an idiot.Take your world's smallest violin and shove it where the sun don't shine. I've been there, it's not easy, but whining about brute-forcing social skills just makes me want to punch you.
And this is all way off-topic. Sorry about the hijack.
It turns out that I was professionaly diagnosed by both a psychologist and then referral to a psychiatrist, with the whole process taking [IIRC] about 10 contact hours. Who knew that real psycho-analysis is complicated? WHY GO TO PROEFESSIONALS WHEN WE CAN JUST USE BOUNTY AND HIS ARMCHAIR INTERNET DEGREE OF PSYCHO-OLOGY.mike wrote:Go fuck yourself, dipshit. There are plenty of people who have been professionally diagnosed, not just geeks on the Internet using the term as an excuse for poor social skills.Bounty wrote:Oh boo-fucking-hoo. First off, 'those of us with aspergers' is a pretty fucking meaningless group considering any nerd who's afraid of people gets the label from the sympathy brigade these days, including yours truly.
Personal anecdote summary: guy gets diagnosed with Asperger's (ps not autism) which slows down his social development, gets better, has a normal life, proves my point.PERSONAL ANECDOTE ALERT :
Actual it proves my point; learns social skills through trial, error and observation; gains normal life. PS aspergers IS a kind of autism, but don't let the facts get in the way.Bounty wrote:Personal anecdote summary: guy gets diagnosed with Asperger's (ps not autism) which slows down his social development, gets better, has a normal life, proves my point.PERSONAL ANECDOTE ALERT :