When you are taking a picture of another person or group of individuals, be aware of the "angles effect." Study briefly the body type or shape of the individual(s) you are about to take picture of. If the person is taller than you when standing, the camera at his/her chest or neck level will produce good pictures. The only exception to this rule is if the person is obese or have broad jaw or double chin, in which you can ask that person to sit down (so s/he is lower than your camera level) or you can step on a ladder or a higher surface to put the camera at a higher level than their face. Then tell the person to stick their chin out away from the body and down slightly. This will create a slimming effect on their face and body. If taking a picture of a short person or a child, squat down so the camera can be at their neck or chest level (assuming the person is standing). Kids love it when you squat down to their level. Pictures of short people or children taken from a high angle almost always turn out not so good.
Here's a page where you can read seven tips that Daddy wrote for other people about taking pictures of kids.
Life lessons and practical tidbits that we, dad and mom, have learned along the way or we wished we could've heard growing up. We write this to you, Princess Adrianna, and to your future siblings, with love, kisses, smacks, and a piece of chocolate raspberry truffle cheesecake.
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Feb 11, 2011
Dec 18, 2010
#12 Say and Write: "Thank You"
Say thank you and/or please to anybody you encounter. If you use computer or phone texting, do the same. People like to be acknowledged.
One summer a long time ago I was asked to photograph a wedding. I was busy carrying all the equipments and taking pictures from noon until almost midnight. Interestingly, neither the bride nor the groom thanked me at the end of the day. It was just a simple, "Bye! Good night!" I was confused and upset because I gave my best, worked hard, and even though I was compensated, the little voice in my head kept bugging me, insisting that, "If the bride and groom weren't happy with my work, at the very least, they could have told me straightforward." I spent days and nights, hours, working on post-processing over 2,000+ images, making certain colors popped up more, increasing contrast, cropping, making certain people looked thinner and more appealing, as well as producing several nice, elegant, wedding albums that would later be sent to the couple and their parents. Again, to my amazement, the bride and groom never called to say thank you or send a card or anything. Only the parents of the groom made a personal call to thank me for the beautiful album.
Understand that even though I was compensated, it would be nice to hear a thank you or a sign of appreciation. When you hire an architect, a housekeeper, or a taxi driver, even though they will be compensated for their hard work, it would still be nice, polite, and uplifting, to hear a thank you from you, "the boss."
A thank you is very simple to say, even more beautiful when said with a smile and sincerity, and heck, there's no cost to it!
So, thank you for saying thank you to the people you will encounter after reading this advice, sweetheart :).
One summer a long time ago I was asked to photograph a wedding. I was busy carrying all the equipments and taking pictures from noon until almost midnight. Interestingly, neither the bride nor the groom thanked me at the end of the day. It was just a simple, "Bye! Good night!" I was confused and upset because I gave my best, worked hard, and even though I was compensated, the little voice in my head kept bugging me, insisting that, "If the bride and groom weren't happy with my work, at the very least, they could have told me straightforward." I spent days and nights, hours, working on post-processing over 2,000+ images, making certain colors popped up more, increasing contrast, cropping, making certain people looked thinner and more appealing, as well as producing several nice, elegant, wedding albums that would later be sent to the couple and their parents. Again, to my amazement, the bride and groom never called to say thank you or send a card or anything. Only the parents of the groom made a personal call to thank me for the beautiful album.
Understand that even though I was compensated, it would be nice to hear a thank you or a sign of appreciation. When you hire an architect, a housekeeper, or a taxi driver, even though they will be compensated for their hard work, it would still be nice, polite, and uplifting, to hear a thank you from you, "the boss."
A thank you is very simple to say, even more beautiful when said with a smile and sincerity, and heck, there's no cost to it!
So, thank you for saying thank you to the people you will encounter after reading this advice, sweetheart :).
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