Tuesday, December 15, 2009

3 easy tips for great family portraits this holiday season

It’s winter! The air is colder, the days are shorter… but it’s also a great time of the year, where family and friends come together to have and share great times. It’s also time for some family portraits. These 3 easy tips will save you from shooting mugshots and give you great family portraits you’ll love to share and reuse for Christmas cards, update emails, and even to create great keepsakes for the holidays or other occasions.

Tip #1 Get closer, get back, and close again.

The key to successful portrait (and to great photo combinations for Christmas cards) is to vary how much of your family members you’ll show. So, try getting close (head shot), and then try a waist-up shot, and then a full body shot. The key here is variety. Once you’ve tried out several angles, pick your top 2 for a great Christmas card!

Tip #1 for a great family portrait: get closeTip #1 for a great family portrait: get close

2 extra tips at play here: try looking for textures (so look for brick or old walls, rust on old shops, etc) and don’t center your subjects. It’ll make for more dynamic shots.

Tip #2 Reindeer see, reindeer do.

Find it hard to get small children to pose in family portraits? Don’t worry, this tip is easy: if the kids don’t pose like the adults… get the adults to pose like the kids. It’ll make for fun, personal and original family poses.

Tip #2 for a great family portrait: get adults to pose like kids

Tip #3 Use the winter window light

Winter actually comes with less aggressive lighting throughout the day, so you’re less limited on when you can take your family portrait. If you decide to go indoors for your family photos, gather everyone closer to a window, where natural lighting is more flattering. Bonus: more light means less risk of pictures being blurry.

Tip #3 for a great family portrait: get a windowTip #1 for a great family portrait: get a window

And remember: just because Christmas is 1 day in the year doesn’t justify taking just 1 shot. The key to getting everyone to look good is to take the shot at least 3 times. That’ll prevent the inevitable blinking, looking away, scratching, to show up in the final family portrait.



posting copied from Eye-fi card site, Thank you.


Tuesday, November 17, 2009

10 tips to help with you photography

Here is a short but helpful list.

1. Look your subject in the eye
Don't look down at your subject, move down to there point of view
2. Use a plain background
Watch out for object that might be comming out of there heads
3. Use flash outdoors
Fill flash
4. Move in close
Fill your frame with action
5. Move it from the middle
An affliction I call center-focus-itis
6. Lock the focus
Helps with number 5
7. Know your flash's range
If you can't light them your just taking photos of shadows
8. Watch the light
Evening light can look very dramatic, keep in mind number 7 and 3
9. Take some vertical pictures
If you don't, it's just wasted space on the sides. Keep in mind number 4
10. Be a picture director
Some people get stiff when they know the camera is on them. Have them do something

Hope these help and we'll be going over them in detail later on.

Keep smiling.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

September 24, 2009

Welcome to The Virtual Image. I will be giving tips and tricks about Photography and having fun applying what we know from film to digital and vise-versa, and having fun doing it. Showing samples of photos and photographic playing.
The virtual Image has existed long before the advent of digital imaging or even the computer. The Virtual image is formed when the subject is so close to the lens that it is less than one focal length distant an image is formed that is not 'real' but is percieved by the eye and is always upright. This is an optical illusion of the eye.