These are my photo's before using Photoshop to change any elements. The first one was taken using manual focus and second one was taken using auto focus.
I learnt a lot from this lesson:
- How to correctly light a photo, using a studio light, and a blank peice of white paper to reflect light. We played around with the placement of our light sources, which often improved the quality of the photo and seemed to airbrush features on a person's face (e.g dark circles under eyes) if you held it underneath the person's face.
- That the model is not in charge of the photo, the photographer is. Ultimately, as a photographer, you are in charge of what you produce, therefore you instruct the model.
- In order to get natural reactions, I told jokes (in order to get my model to laugh naturally) and we experimented with throwing things at / around the model. My peers and I found both methods effective, and captured a lot more than our models simply smiling on command. I'm trying to step away from the typical "selfie" image in our photo's during this photography course and experiment.
- I found that in order to both look proffessional and focus on my model, if the background is one singular colour. I chose black as it was accessable and I thought, as the model was wearing white already, it would contrast the colours nicely.
Model: Annaleigh Gailbraith