Photography Competitions: Meet the Judges!

 

 

 

Photography Competitions:
Meet the Judges!

Photography competitions are made more meaningful by the caliber of the judges. We were delighted to have have three professional photographers judge our Ultimate Photo Tips Worldwide Camera Club Competition. They were:

Richard Martin

www.richardmartinphoto.com

Richard Martin

A long-time contributor to Photo Life magazine, Richard Martin pursues photography as a medium of visual expression. He is best known for his unique vision with a personal style characterized by a strong sense of composition, colour and the use of light – combining an architectural love of geometry, pattern and texture with a painter’s sensitivity to colour, light and composition.
Well known for sharing his enthusiasm, creative vision and passion for the medium, Richard continues to inspire participants with his annual photography and visual design workshops in his native Kingston, Ontario since 1990. He also conducts workshops, tours, and seminars around the world

 

Rob Davidson

www.rdaphoto.com

Rob Davidson

Rob is a commercial photographer with over 30 years of shooting experience — and he’s still having fun! He’s based out of a great downtown studio in Toronto, Canada, but is always happy to venture out and see the world. He is passionate about food, travel, beautifully designed objects and interesting people. His clients like his gift for making even the most mundane object beautiful.

Rob has also been teaching photography, and the Business of Photography for about 20 years, mostly at Ryerson University, and through workshops and classes in his studio.  He has always found that teaching, in addition to keeping him on his toes and current, inspires him in his own work.

 

Tony Sweet

http://tonysweet.com

Tony Sweet

After 20 years as a professional jazz artist, Tony changed careers and directed his creative juices towards nature photography. The improvisational, spontaneous, and abstract nature of jazz are also integral elements of nature photography.

Tony’s work is published on calendars, post cards, posters, annual reports, greeting cards, catalogs, and electronic mediums. His fine art prints are exhibited in private and corporate collections throughout the United States, and he is represented by The Getty Picture Agency. His images are also used by Nikon, NikSoftware, Singh Ray, Microtek, and others for national ad campaigns.

Tony conducts Visual Artistry photography location workshops, and speaks to photography organizations and PPA schools throughout the continental United States and Canada. Tony’s articles and images are featured in Shutterbug and Rangefinder magazines, and is a contributor to Nikonnet.com. He is a staff writer for Nikon World magazine.

He has authored four books on the art of photography: Fine Art Nature Photography (’02), Fine Art Flower Photography (’05), Fine Art Nature Photography: Water, Ice, Fog (’07), and Fine Art Digital Nature (’09).

Tony maintains an active speaking schedule, addressing professional photography organizations, universities, seminars, and teaching workshops, and is an instructor on betterphoto.com.

Tony was honored as a Nikon Legend Behind the Lens in 2006, member of Team Nik (NikSoftware) in 2007, and a Lensbaby Guru in 2008.

 

Return to the photography competitions results.

 

Photography Rules of Composition: Eliminate Distractions



Photography Rules of Composition: Eliminate Distractions


Learn about the photography rules of composition, and how to eliminate distractions. You want to break the rules? You need to master them first, so read on to add more rules to your toolbox!

distractions in photography composition
It’s easy to see the problem here!
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

Eliminate Photography Distractions

The human brain is an amazing instrument. It has many ways of helping us handle the huge volumes of information we encounter every second. One of the mechanisms it uses is filtering. Through the process of paying attention, we filter out unnecessary information. When we pay attention to something, it means we ignore everything else around.

You may have heard the psychological study that was conducted where subjects were asked to watch a clip of a basketball game. They were asked to pay attention to the players passing the ball, and count how many passes were made. The clip lasts a few minutes. About thirty seconds into the clip, a person dressed in a gorilla suit walks onto the court and does a jig. Approximately half the subjects failed to notice the person in the gorilla suit. Their attention was directed elsewhere.

As photographers, we often fall victim to this same phenomenon. For example, when we are taking a picture of our friend, our attention is focused on them. We fail to notice that there’s a tree "growing" out from behind their head, and that someone else’s elbow is intruding into the picture space.

There are several kinds of photography distractions that can spoil your image:

Intrusions

The above image of the donkey is a dramatic example of an intrusion. Sometimes the intrusions are smaller, and less easily noticed. It may be a tree branch, or an elbow poking into the frame. Whatever it is, it will definitely distract your viewer. To understand why things at the edge of the frame are so distracting, read another one of the photography rules of composition about visual weight.

Bright Spots or "Black Holes"

Your eye is always drawn to the brightest spot in an image. Very dark areas can be distracting too. To understand why dark and light spots are so distracting, read another one of the photography rules of composition about visual weight.

A trick to drawing your attention to these trouble spots before you take the picture is to defocus the lens slightly. This stops you from seeing the actual picture elements, and reduces everything to fields of tone and color. Any excessively light or dark spots will now jump out at you. Another way to do this trick is just to squint your eyes. This effectively "defocuses" them and achieves the same effect.

photography distractions
Our eye is drawn immediately to the bright sun on the baby’s face.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

Mergers

Mergers are when two objects overlap one another. If the overlap is slight, it can actually be distracting. Try to adjust your camera angle to separate all the objects in the frame, or wait for them to move into a better position. The photography composition below illustrates an extreme merger where the two horses heads overlap. The result looks like a strange beast indeed!

mergers in photography composition
A most unfortunate merger!
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

Mergers can also happen with the edge of the picture frame. If just a little bit of your subject is cut off at the edge of the frame, we call that a merger too. It is distracting because we immediately want to see the missing bit. The positioning looks (and usually is 🙂 accidental. If you want to cut part of your subject out of the frame, make it look deliberate, and cut a lot out. Check out the following examples:

photography rules of composition
A merger with the edge looks accidental
and is distracting.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

photography rules of composition
Either go all-in…
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

photography rules of composition
…or make the crop look deliberate.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

The photography rules of composition are here to help! One of the simplest ways to improve your photography is to stop and scan the entire area inside your picture frame before you press the shutter button. Disconnect yourself emotionally from the subject for a moment, and take the time to look at the picture analytically. Move your eye around the image in a methodical way, looking for objects that intrude into the picture space, dark or bright spots, and mergers. Act to eliminate them before taking the picture.

 

I recommend you read the next of the photography rules of composition: the photography rule of thirds.

 

Photography eBooks



Photography eBooks


Improve your photography with Ultimate Photo Tips downloadable PDF photography eBooks! Each book is rich in useful information, and packed with spectacular, full-color images to inspire you. I have worked hard to make these books instructive, easy to understand, and inexpensive. I hope you’ll enjoy this collection, and the many titles that I will continue to add. Thank you for your support!

Julie Waterhouse

 

 

Create Photographs You Can Be Proud Of

Do you want to take better photographs? I want to help you to start taking pictures that will give you a sense of pride and accomplishment; pictures that will "wow" your friends, and that you’d be happy to hang on your wall. Learn from the informative content in these eBooks, and be inspired by the beautiful and creative images.

close up photography

Story-Telling through Visual Design
by Julie Waterhouse

Do you sometimes struggle to translate the way you feel when you view a scene into a final photograph that evokes those same feelings? This photography eBook is filled with easy to implement tips on visual design that will help you be a more effective story-teller with your images.

Learn more. $12

Add to Cart View Cart

close up photography

Close-up Photography
by Julie Waterhouse

Enjoy getting lost in the details as you explore the exciting world of close-up and macro photography with Julie. Beautifully illustrated, this photography eBook includes tips on equipment, depth of field, composition and more.

Learn more. $8

Add to Cart View Cart

close up photography

Close-up Photography II
by Julie Waterhouse

Go further in your exploration of close-up photography with the second book in this series. Learn about the key differences between closeup and traditional photography, advanced equipment and camera features, controlling your light, and creating a successful workflow.

Learn more. $8

Add to Cart View Cart

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How do I download my eBook?

After you’ve paid for the eBook, the PayPal checkout interface will display a "Click here to download…" link to download the your copy of the book.

I hope you enjoy my photography eBooks!

Photography Newsletter



Photography Newsletter


Sign up for our FREE newsletter, and receive creativity exercises, educational information, and inspiring ideas that I don’t share anywhere else! You’ll also be the first to hear about our latest video tips.

Plus, sign up now, and receive a free bonus eBook: "12 Fun Exercises to Inspire Your Photographic Creativity" (in PDF format). Each page has an exercise for you to try that’s designed to get you thinking outside the box, and pushing your creative boundaries. I include example photographs for each exercise.

Learn And Be Inspired With Our Newsletter!

creativity exercises

 

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(it’s free!)

 

 

 

A Letter from a Reader:

I have taken photographs ever since I bought my first camera at the age of 12… that’s almost 55 years ‘;>)

At one point, I shot weddings, advertising and portraits. For twelve years, I was the sales rep for Canon in the Mass. and Ct. territories.

Your [newsletter] has the most relevant information for all levels of amateur photographer and I congratulate you for having done this.

Keep up the good work!

Malcolm

More Reader Love:

You have a beautiful website and [your newsletter] is a must for anyone interested in photography. Congratulations on such a fine production!

Larry

I look forward to sharing lots of fun exercises, inspiring ideas, and juicy tips and tricks with you on the list. See you there!

Looking for our old photography newsletter, Worth a Thousand Words? Check out the back issues (May 2010-June 2012).

Photography Project Ideas



Photography Project Ideas




What photography project ideas would you work on if you had an entire week to devote to shooting? It’s rare for most of us to get a solid chunk of time to spend on our favorite pastime. Let’s indulge in some creative thinking, and share photography ideas!

Would you shoot doors and windows? A construction site, as the project progresses? Old cars? A "day in the life of…"? Would you take a trip to your favorite destination for some travel photography? Chase your children around? Shoot reflections?

photography project ideas
You never know where you might find project ideas…
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

I’ve always wanted to go to a park, and set up my camera to point at a busy park bench. I’d settle in for a few hours, and then take images at fixed time intervals, say every ten minutes. It’s really an exercise in time lapse photography. I think the resulting images could make a fun photo essay. The setting would stay the same, but the subjects would change at random.

Now, I’d love to hear your ideas!

See what others have to say.

***C2_invitation_23134933***

Photography Quotes



Photography Quotes


Here’s a collection of photography quotes that I hope you’ll find inspirational, insightful, and fun. I’ve been a quote collector for years! I’ve finally put together some of my favorites that relate to photography. Enjoy!

graveyard
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

Photography Quotes About the Joy of Photography

"To photograph is to hold one’s breath, when all faculties converge to capture fleeting reality. It’s at that precise moment that mastering an image becomes a great physical and intellectual joy."
— Henri Cartier-Bresson

"Taking pictures is savouring life intensely, every hundredth of a second."
— Marc Riboud

"Which of my photographs is my favourite? The one I’m going to take tomorrow."
— Immogen Cunningham

 

Photography Quotes About the Expression of Self

"A great photograph is a full expression of what one feels."
— Ansel Adams

"If all your life means to you is water running over rocks, then photograph it, but I want to create something that would not have existed without me."
— Minor White

"The photographer projects himself into everything he sees, identifying himself with everything in order to know it and to feel it better."
— Minor White

"We do not make photographs with our cameras. We make them with our minds, with our hearts, with our ideas."
— Arnold Newman

"There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer."
— Ansel Adams

"To make images is a way of ordering one’s world, of exploring and understanding one’s relationship to existence. … The images we make are often ahead of our understanding, but to say "yes" to a subject is also to have recognized, however dimly, a part of oneself; to live with that image, to accept its significance is perhaps to grow in understanding."
— John Blakemore

 

Photography Quotes About the Impact of Photography

"Photography takes an instant out of time, altering life by holding it still."
— Dorothea Lange 

"Photography helps people to see."
— Berenice Abbott

"Utter truth is essential, and that is what stirs me when I look through the camera."
— Margaret Bourke-White

"Photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving. What you have caught on film is captured forever… it remembers little things, long after you have forgotten everything."
— Aaron Siskind

"If it makes you laugh, if it makes you cry, if it rips out your heart, that’s a good picture."
— Eddie Adams, Pulitzer prize-winning photographer

"Photography was the first available demonstration that light could indeed exert an action sufficient to cause changes in material bodies."
— Fox Talbot

"The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera."
— Dorothea Lange

 

Photography Quotes About the Photographer

"Two qualities essential for a great photographer — insatiable curiosity about the world, about people and about life, and a precise sense of form."
— Brassai

"If the photographer is not a discoverer, then he is not an artist."
— Paul Strand

 

Photography Quotes About the Craft

"The more you photograph, the more you realize what can be photographed and what can’t be photographed. You just have to keep doing it."
— Eliot Porter

"A good photograph is knowing where to stand."
— Ansel Adams

"My job as a portrait photographer is to seduce, amuse and entertain."
— Helmut Newton

"Photographers undervalue the use of the wastebasket in their pursuit of fine photography."
— Ralph Steiner

"Dodging and burning are steps to take care of mistakes God made in establishing tonal relationships."

Ansel Adams

 

Photography Quotes About Seeing the Extra-Ordinary in the Ordinary

"We are not interested in the unusual, but in the usual seen unusually."
— Beaumont Newhall

"To me, photography is an art of observation. It’s about finding something interesting in an ordinary place… I’ve found it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them."
— Elliott Erwitt

"The act of making a photograph is less a question of what is being looked at than how."
— Margaret Atwood

"If you do not see what is around you every day, what will you see when you go to Tangiers?"
— Freeman Patterson

"Anything that excites me for any reason, I will photograph; not searching for unusual subject matter, but making the commonplace unusual."
— Edward Weston

"A photographer who wants to see, a photographer who wants to make fine images, must recognize the value in the familiar."
— Freeman Patterson

"It takes a lot of imagination to be a good photographer. You need less imagination to be a painter, because you can invent things. But in photography everything is so ordinary; it takes a lot of looking before you learn to see the extraordinary."
— David Bailey

 

I hope you enjoyed this collection of quotes! Feel free to add your own using the social commenting feature below. Click on "Add a Comment," select Facebook, Yahoo, AOL or hotmail, and enter your quote in the box. Be sure to give it proper attribution.

Photography Rules of Composition: Simplify



Photography Rules of Composition: Simplify


Here is the first of the photography rules of composition you need to have in your toolbox: simplify! You want to break the rules? Well, you need to master them first, so read on!

Simplify

You’ve probably heard of the KISS principle. "Keep It Simple, Stupid!" It teaches us to strive for design simplicity, and avoid unnecessary complexity. In photography composition, that means that we don’t want to include any elements in our picture space that distract from our main message.

It’s very tempting sometimes, when we come upon a great scene, to try to include everything in the picture. That is a mistake. It ends up being a jumble of elements that make for "information overload" for the viewer. It’s up to you to figure out what attracted you to the scene in the first place, and simplify the image to emphasize that factor.

You must evaluate each element in the frame, and make sure it contributes to the story. If it doesn’t, you need to eliminate it. This can be done in a couple of ways.

 

Recompose

First, you can simply recompose the image to eliminate the unnecessary elements by changing your position, or just moving the camera a little.

 

Zoom in

You can also zoom in closer to fill the frame with only part of the scene.

photography composition: Zoomed out
The base of the tree and the patchy ground are distracting.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

photography composition: Zoomed in
Zoom in to focus attention on the most interesting part: the face.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

Use shallow depth of field

Depth of field is great a great tool for simplifying. A shallow depth of field can eliminate background clutter, and draw attention to the in-focus elements.

photography rules of composition: deep depth of field
A large depth of field produces a busy image.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

photography rules of composition: Shallow depth of field
A shallow depth of field focuses attention on the right-hand flower.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

I recommend you read the next of the rules of composition: eliminate distractions.

 

Photography Rules of Composition: Visual Weight



Photography Rules of Composition: Visual Weight


Photography rules of composition: visual weight is the next one you need to have in your toolbox. It can make or break your photo!

Visual weight is a concept that describes how much something in an image “pulls” your eye to look at it. Imagine that you have an almost entirely white image with a small black dot in it. That black dot will pull your eye immediately; it carries a lot of visual weight.

As a photographer, you can use the photography rules of composition, and visual weight to your advantage. You can deliberately manipulate your subject in such a way that it carries a lot of visual weight, and thereby draws the viewer’s eye. On the other hand, if you are not aware of the concept of visual weight, you can inadvertently produce images with annoying distractions.

Balance

Tip

You don’t have to balance color with color, or light with dark. You can mix and match your visual weights! For example, a counter-weight to a large, bright area might be a small red object.

Many of the photography rules of composition relate to the idea of balance. Ideally, we want our images to be balanced. By "balanced," I mean that no single area of the image draws our eye so much that we get stuck there. Instead, our eye is free to roam around the image and take it all in. A balanced image feels pleasing to the eye, and not lop-sided in any way.

Another way of saying this is that an image is balanced as long as its visual weight is evenly distributed. Every element in your composition carries a certain amount of visual weight. To keep your image balanced, you must compensate for each element with a counter-weight. As you will learn in the following sections, different colors, different levels of contrast, and different subject positions all carry different visual weights.

In the photography compostion below, although the horses are small, they are both dark enough, and positioned close enough to the corner, to "weigh" as much as all of the light area of the image.

photography rules of composition: visual weight
The placement of the horses right in the corner adds tension.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

Let’s use our photography rules of composition, and look at each kind of visual weight in turn.

Contrast

Very light or very dark objects (light or dark in relation to their surroundings) draw our eyes. If you want to draw attention to a light colored subject, place it against a dark background. Conversely, place a dark subject against a light background to make it stand out.

photography rules of composition: visual weight
Photography rules of composition: visual weight – contrast
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

Be careful that you don’t have unintentional things in your picture that carry strong visual weight. These will take away from your main subject. For example, if the sun is reflecting off a shiny object in the background, it will take attention away from your subject. Likewise, if you have a dark spot that is unrelated to your subject, it will distract the eye. See the photography composition example below.

photography rules of composition: visual weight
The black spot in the snow to the left of the tracks pulls your eye away.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

Learn more in this section on eliminating distractions – another of the photography rules of composition.

Large expanses of white, or a bright color, in the image will draw your eye away from your subject as well. Your eye is first drawn to the brightest spot in the image.

What do you notice in the first photo below? You eye keeps going back to the sky in the top right. That’s not what’s interesting! But you can’t help it. The image is unbalanced, so your eye gets stuck on the sky.

photography composition: visual weight
The bright sky pulls your eye.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

What about the second image? It’s exactly the same as the first one, except that I’ve cropped off the whole top. Now you’re looking where you should be, at the rock formations.

photography composition: visual weight
Now you can focus on what’s important.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

Color

Specific colors draw our eyes too. Red and yellow easily attract attention. A spot of color amidst a neutral background also draws the eye. In the image below, I’ve used color to my advantage to draw your eye to the house. This image would not have the same impact at all in black and white.

photography composition: visual weight
That red roof is small, but it commands a lot of attention.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

That tiny spot of red carries a lot of visual weight. To my eye, it counter-balances the whole blue area of the sky. The small, red hot spot "weighs" about the same as the larger expanse of cool blue sky. Try to imagine the colors reversed with a blue roof and a red sky. The red would be overwhelming, and the image would be out of balance.

In the image below, color also plays an important role. In this case, however, it’s what causes the image to fail. It’s a nice idea to shoot the mountains with some vegetation in the foreground. Here, however, the bright yellow is too strong. It has so much visual weight that it completely overwhelms the image.

photography composition: visual weight
Both the brightness and color of the yellow flowers
overwhelm the image.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

In the following image of the same mountain, I used different foreground vegetation. The color is more subdued, and the visual weight of the image is better balanced. The green grass and purple flowers "weigh" less than the yellow flowers above.

photography rules of composition: visual weight
These more subtle flowers provide a balanced foreground.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

Position

Where an object is in relation to the boundary, or frame of the image, impacts its visual weight. Objects that are close to the edge of the frame carry more visual weight. In other words, they draw our eye more. Again, you can use this to your advantage. If you place your subject according to another of the photography rules of composition, the photography rule of thirds, you will have a pleasing image. However, if you stretch that “off-center is better” rule, and place your subject even closer to the edge, you will produce more tension, and a greater sense of drama.

photography rules of composition: visual weight
The scene is made more dramatic by placing the barn in the corner.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

Because the barn is placed so close to the corner, it takes a lot of bright orange flowers to counter-balance its visual weight. If there were only green grass in front, the image would look unbalanced.

In the following photography composition, the flower has enough visual weight to balance all that rock, by virtue of both its color, and its position in the corner.

photography rules of composition: visual weight
Rock versus flower!
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

That’s it for visual weight! Now I recommend you read the next of the photography rules of composition: major-minor.

 

Photography Rules of Composition: Major-Minor



Photography Rules of Composition: Major-Minor


Photography rules of composition: it’s time for my last one. Find out what the "major – minor" rule is all about, and how to use it to improve your photography.

Major-Minor

Tip

If you have more than one significant point of interest in your image, then it’s recommended to have an odd number. Why? This tends to keep your eye moving around the image.

The "major-minor" rule refers to having one primary, or major element in the photo, and then a secondary, minor repetition of it. The repeated object is less dominant in the image. This is usually accomplished by making the minor element smaller, but sometimes by having it be less in focus. The minor element is like an echo of the major one — the same, but softer.

photography rules of composition: major-minor
The large tree is the "major" element, and the smaller is the "minor" element.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

If you have two significant points of interest in the image that do not follow the major-minor rule, but instead are of equal visual weight, then your eye plays "ping pong," bouncing back and forth between them.

photography rules of composition: major-minor
Ping pong! Your eye can’t rest.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

For this reason, one element should be reduced, allowing the other to take second stage. The second, minor element then acts as a balance.

Here is another example of the major-minor rule at work. It’s quite simple. One dominant object, and another just like it, but reduced in impact.

photography composition: major-minor
The second cow is a lesser echo of the first.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

In the following photography composition, the major-minor rule is extended somewhat to include not just a simple object, but a larger picture element. The lower line of vegetation in the image is the major center of interest. The secondary line above provides a minor reflection of it to provide balance to the image. Without the detail of the vegetation, the upper line is reduced in visual weight.

photography composition: major-minor
The top line is a lesser echo of the bottom one.
© Julie Waterhouse Photography

 

That’s it for photography rules of composition! Next you may want to learn about cropping photos to improve your compositions.

 

Photography Portrait Tips



Photography Portrait Tips


Find out why you should throw out all your portrait photography textbooks with the complicated lighting diagrams. Here, you can find photography portrait tips for posing and lighting that are tailored to the individual.

Portraits Tailored to Individual Faces

Why would I suggest that you throw out all your portrait lighting books and lighting diagrams?

photography portrait tips
© Julie Waterhouse

The problem is that these books often fail to take into account the fact that every human subject is unique. Our faces are all different. As such, the best place to put the lights and camera varies according to the face you are shooting. Lighting diagrams are formulaic, and don’t take into account individual differences. A few photography portrait tips on posing and lighting that concentrate on faces are all you need to get started making great portraits.

Symmetry

The first thing to realize is that symmetry is perceived to be beautiful.  Many studies have shown that we find symmetrical faces more attractive than asymmetrical ones.  That means that anything we can do as a photographer to make our subject’s face appear more symmetrical will make for more pleasing portraits.

Irregularities

Tip

Making faces attractive is big business. Every year, Americans spend over $13 billion on cosmetic surgery and tens of billions on cosmetics and beauty products. As a photographer, you can have a slice of the pie! You will have greater success in your business if you learn a few portrait techniques that enhance your subject’s natural beauty, and make them appear more attractive — without any extra products or radical surgery. You can become the master of illusion!

The other major factor that contributes to our perception of attractiveness is "averageness" of the face. By that, I don’t mean a dull and boring face, but rather one that is free from irregularities or distinctive features. This means that minimizing those irregularities through the poses you choose will improve your portraits.

Read about how to pose your subject to make their face appear more symmetrical and regular.

Read about how to light your subject to make them appear slimmer and more attractive.

My thanks to professional photographer Rob Davidson for teaching me this perspective on portrait photography.

 

 

 

Next, I recommend you read this inspiring article by Larry Monczka on creative portrait photography technique.