16 August 2008

Portrait Method - TWIP

Posted by Scott under: Tips

Photo by Scott Bourne

Photo by Scott Bourne

When you want to make a portrait, try to schedule enough time to get to know your subject. Provide them with a clothing checklist. Long sleeved turtle necks or crew necked sweaters are very flattering. Solid colors are better than patterned clothing. Women should wear basic, understated makeup. Both men and women should avoid prominent jewelry.

Before your subject arrives, scout your location and have your equipment ready. Have your assistant help you preset a basic exposure. When the subject arrives, you want to put all of your attention on them and not your equipment. This takes practice but yields great results.

You should study the subject and look for problem areas. This will help you decide where to place the camera relative to the subject. In most cases, placing the camera lens at your subject’s eye level is best. If you have a particularly heavy subject, raise your camera position and have the subject look up. This will thin out the neck and draw attention away from double chins. If you have someone with a scar, turn that side of the face toward the light. It sounds counter-intuitive but it works. The lit side tends to disappear in the photo. The shadow side of the face is more likely to reveal texture and facial imperfections.

If the subject is sitting, place them on the edge of their seat. Whether sitting or standing, ask them to straighten up. The pose should be basic. In fact, the more basic your posing technique, the more likely it is that your subject will appear natural.

The head and shoulders should point in the same direction. The head should be tilted towards the lower shoulder, so that it is perpendicular to the slope of the shoulder. The face and body should be turned towards the light. A variation on this theme is to turn the body away from the light and the face toward the light. The head is turned and tipped to the highest shoulder. This variation works especially well for women unless they are heavyset. In either pose, lean the body slightly forward at the waist. Be sure that the head turns and tips to the same shoulder.

Smiles and expression are also very important. There are some tricks you can use to get a natural smile. First ask the subject to lick their lips. It helps make the lips shine and gets them used to using their mouth. Then say something like…”Okay give me just a hint of a smile.” Take the picture and then immediately say…”Oh come on, that’s fake.” This will usually cause the subject to break out into a natural grin. Another trick I use is to say something like…”Come on, you don’t know me well enough to be that mad at me.” Or…”Okay on this one, try not to look like you are posing for the WWF poster.” Experiment with different jokes. You will develop your own sayings that work, and you will get the smile that counts, the real one.

This post sponsored by Lensbabies.

6 Comments so far...

Chris Pichado Says:

17 August 2008 at 10:51 am.

These are some great tips, Scott! Especially for CEO type shots where you’ve more pressure to ‘get it done’ in a short amount of time. Family or couples are usually more lenient with letting you get set up, but business types are by nature very limited on time.

I think the more tips like these that a photog can keep fresh in their head at the shoot, the better quality they can produce in a shorter time.

When I’m shooting couples, my line is

“Wow, you look beautiful! I love your hair!… And you too, Mrs. ____!”

;-)


Chris

Michael Says:

17 August 2008 at 3:36 pm.

I think you already posted this one….

http://twipphoto.com/archives/441

Scott Says:

17 August 2008 at 3:37 pm.

Yep but I am bringing back some oldies that some people never saw. I will change the pics tho :)

Craig Says:

18 August 2008 at 8:39 am.

would be great if you guys could do a video on this. would make it heaps easier to understand all the stuff about heads facing the same way as shoulders and all that stuff and get a better idea of how you interact with your models.

Tim Says:

21 August 2008 at 4:37 pm.

I strongly second the video idea…

Jason Says:

18 September 2008 at 8:54 am.

I would love to see a video.. I really enjoy your video casts. It would be nice to see some on actual shoots as well as your normal gear casts.

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