I don't really understand the technique wit the panorama and the portraiture but I'/m going to research it when I have more than 30 seconds to loko online.
BEAUTIFUL work... a lot of these are so classy and clean. I was also thinking that this is one of your strongest sets. The framing, processing, and approach to these pictures is great.
Kudos. I have little to add that hasn't been mentioned.
I'm struck by how many looks you and your model achieved. She's very versatile and your hard work shows that to best advantage.
You are to be commended for putting in so much prep/experimentation to build your skill set, although from the looks of it it was a labor of love. I'm sure your efforts will pay off in spades down the road.
Pre-planning and pre-visualization is the mark of a talented professional. Even though the bench shot is the most obvious example of the lot, it's evident that you put a lot of thought into these images way before the shutter was pressed.
I really like 9 and the progression of smiles in 20.
Very attractive model. Thank you for not over-processing her lovely face.
She is much more attractive looking "real" than she would be looking
"glamour."
the thread liiiiiiives Thanks folks for the comments. I never answered the question above re watermark: I use lightroom's morgify plugin. Awesome tool, made a donation. Saves me tons of time.
@tc20- read my previous replies, I answered your question
Awesome awesome set. Only one that doesn't seem to fit is #4. Andrew, was the lighting on the Brenizer method shots all natural light or were strobes used?
Diavolo wrote:
Awesome awesome set. Only one that doesn't seem to fit is #4. Andrew, was the lighting on the Brenizer method shots all natural light or were strobes used?
Thanks for your feedback.
fullpotential wrote:
For the first few strobe shots, did you gel the strobe? shoot through an umbrella?
-great work, saving this thread
Thank you. No gel on the strobe. Shoot through used.
Tubby wrote:
I really like the tilt-shift images of her. Good use of technique.
Thanks, but they were not T-S images. They were shot with a regular lens. Read the posts on the technique used to achieve the look.