Here are two shots I took of my girlfriend, please critique, I'm a beginner at best with portraits.
Here's the EXIF data used an A75.
1st - 1/50s f/3.5 at 9.4mm, no flash
2nd - 1/80s f/3.5 at 9.4mm, no flash
Diminished29 Senior Member 620 posts Joined Jan 2006 Location: Bridgewater, VA More info | Jan 06, 2006 16:19 | #1 Here are two shots I took of my girlfriend, please critique, I'm a beginner at best with portraits. Chad
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Jan 06, 2006 16:46 | #2 The first is interesting but the second one is too dark. If you want do a silhouette it should be completely black. The eyes are the window to the soul so if you have any light on someone I would say most folks will want to see the eyes. Canon EOS 5D | Canon T5i | Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L | Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8L | Canon EF 15mm f/2.8 | Canon 16-35mm f/2.8L II | Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro | Canon EF 135mm f/2.0L | Tokina 10-17mm | Canon 60mm EF-S f/2.8 | 550EX Speedlite TTL
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Yeah, your right, also, do you think that I'm perhaps to close to her face and that I should've been standing back a bit on the 2nd pic? Chad
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KevC Goldmember 3,154 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: to More info | Jan 06, 2006 16:57 | #4 Your GF is cuuute! Take more pics!! Too much gear...
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Titus213 Cream of the Crop More info | Jan 06, 2006 16:59 | #5 Don't know if you have a flash but if so this would be a good use for it. Your problem is the bright light in the window which is what the camera is trying to expose. It's a classic back lit problem. Dave
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imchillindave Senior Member 268 posts Joined Nov 2005 Location: Little Rock, AR More info | Jan 06, 2006 21:39 | #6 The first one would be alot better if the framed picture on the wall was out of the picture. I like the lighting in it though. If the shadow area on her left side of her face is a lil dark for your taste, use a piece of foam board or something white and hold it just outside the picture to bounce back some of the light as a natural fill light. And you're right on the second one, the window is too bright and detracts from the subject. You're probably not going to be able to do much with this picture because JPEG artifacts will be real bad due to detail loss in under exposure. Keep on trying though, practice makes better and you're on the right track. Canon 30D | Canon 5D
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Desertraptor Cream of the Crop More info | Jan 06, 2006 21:45 | #7 Lucky man, She's a pretty girl Peter
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JMHPhotography Goldmember 4,784 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2005 Location: New Hampshire More info | Jan 06, 2006 21:48 | #8 The first one is interesting. I like the direction of the light, but I think maybe you could have exposed it a little more. The second one is severely backlit. Your camera exposed for the window behind her(and still blew it out) and left her in the shadows. What would have been good here is a fast shutter to expose the window properly, and fill flash with fast shutter sync to expose her properly. ~John
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waldograce Goldmember 1,680 posts Likes: 1 Joined Oct 2005 Location: Bristol, VA More info | Jan 06, 2006 22:55 | #9 I think they both could have used a little fill flash. I can't create beauty with my camera, I can only capture it.
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Thanks guys, and yes I am quite lucky, she's a wonderful girl. Chad
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