The key to shooting a silhouette is all about lighting. Whether its studio lighting or natural, you need your subject backlit well in order to help your image truly pop.
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Photographs are the perfect travel memento. On the ground they motivate you to really take in your surroundings and appreciate the view; after you've flown home they accurately reflect the time, season, and sky of your destination–as you experienced it.
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Join Brooke today on Skype to have your questions answered and watch the final week of her Fine Art Bootcamp.
In my career as a photographer, I have made several changes in my journey that have all been beneficial to making a living, how I feel about myself, and how I can benefit others.
This is an excerpt from Danielle Krysa's latest book Your Inner Critic Is A Big Jerk. Danielle is an artist, graphic designer, writer and the mind behind the wildly popular contemporary art blog The Jealous Curator.
Childhood is running, jumping, playing, giggling — pretty much the exact opposite of sitting still and saying cheese for perfect kid's portraits. The task of sitting perfectly posed for pictures is torture for active kids, terrifying for shy kids, and impossible for many kids.
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I’ll go out on a limb here and say that most family photographers in the market are not part of a large organization or multi-photographer studio that has a cookie-cutter approach to photography and a marketing budget to drive enough clients to support that. A good portion of the industry is made up of solo-shooters who love family and all that it means.