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02-19-10 Evie

I just finished teaching a short course at night called "Intro To Digital Photography." I had a great group, though I've discovered that trying to translate the process of conceiving, taking and processing a digital photo isn't easy. But teaching photography has been good for me because it has helped me objectify my hobby and break it down. My conclusion is this: taking and making a good photo is a very complex process.

So why a photo of Evie and her horse? Evie's mother was one of my students in this class and helped with this photo. So I thought I'd post it. Like the photo of Gabriel from a few weeks ago, this photo breaks a rule of portrait photography that says that the subject's face should be the biggest object in the photo. But I think Evie does a good job of stealing the viewer's attention. :-)

Canon 1D 1/125s f/4.5 ISO200 70mm

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01-23-10 Regan

This is another one of my early experiments in portraiture. Regan had come along on a photo shoot to provide company for a friend of hers I was photographing (whose pictures I can't find :-( ).

After photographing her friend, I asked Regan if she minded if I took a few pictures of her. She grudgingly agreed and this photo may show a little of her reluctance. I didn't know much about portraiture then but I did know that the soft window light I found for this portrait is flattering. I hadn't learned about Rembrandt lighting but it is present in this portrait.

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01-21-10 Ellie

In the process of organizing my photo collection (400,000+!) I came across some of my first portrait sessions. This happens to be of a girl named Ellie and is one of my favorite portraits. I was shooting film in those days and then developing it in my makeshift darkroom. Once the negatives were ready, I used a high resolution film scanner and Photoshop to process the pictures.

Ellie was very relaxed and comfortable. I wasn't because I really didn't know anything about taking portraits. I thank her for this photo, which was taken in a doorway of an old barn north of Watertown.

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12-27-09 Snow Angel?????

By Scott Shephard

I was hot tubbing at Bill Zubke's in a SD blizzard. What possessed me to run from the steaming hot tub and jump in the snow? Stupidity. I hope this photo isn't too disturbing for younger viewers. I know it disturbs me.

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12-08-09 Look At Me: Big Eyes

We spent a few hours in a Japanese pre-school when we visited my son Brian in Japan a few years ago. I found this when I was looking for something that I might be able to post in the "Look At Me" series. I love this photo because it just "happened." There was no staging or coaching involved. I stopped and she looked up at me with a curiosity I saw everywhere in the children in this school. Of course her beautiful big, dark eyes help make this photo.

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12-07-09 Look At Me: Friends

Getting a decent portrait of one person is hard enough. Photographing two people increases the challenge. Not only do you have to hope that they both look good/happy/whatever when you snap the picture but there are technical considerations. The two biggest are lighting and focus. In the studio I generally use two light sources to light the faces, though you can tell from the highlights in the eyes that the main light is to my right. Since eyes need to be sharply in focus, I coach the subjects to try to have their eyes on the same plane relative to the camera. I also use a high f-stop (8 or 11), which helps the depth of field.

Canon 1DII 1/400s f/8.0 ISO200 45mm

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12-05-09 Look At Me: Nice Bones!

I have helped take photographs for the Watertown High School yearbook for many years. In last year's edition I did a series of photos for the beginning of each section in the book. This one was for the "Academics" section. Nice skeleton. I'm told that it's not "real" but made from plastic.

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12-04-09 Look At Me: Staying Dry!

Before I begin a portrait session, I will often ask if the subject has any ideas about where and how they want to be photographed. Often they tell me that they'll trust me to figure something out. But sometimes they come up with impractical ideas: "I've always thought it would be cool to be photographed on a camel in front of the Great Pyramid." Or "How about a portrait of me water-skiing in my cap and gown?" Right.

This last one was Thad's idea and while I was skeptical, he executed the feat brilliantly. My job was to try to get one good photo before he fell. I took about 75 and he liked this one. And he never fell.

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12-03-09 Look At Me: Rembrandt Lighting

This is a good example of what portrait photographers call Rembrandt lighting. In simple terms, the main light comes from from above eye level and from the side. This results in one side of the face being fairly bright and a splash of light highlighting the cheek bone. This lighting thins and flatters the face, although Jessica's classic good looks needed little flattery.

Incidentally, this photo shows the result of a fairly strong soft filter applied in Photoshop. So, contrary to what I said a couple days ago, I do blur reality once in a while. I just thought the effect made this portrait a little more glamorous.

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Look At Me: Pastels

By Scott Shephard

This photo is largely "un-photoshoped." When I process a photo, I try not to take away the actual person, which is a temptation given all the things you can do with software.

This is one of my favorite portraits. I like the relaxed and natural look of my subject, Noel, but I also like the colors. The soft pink of the stone building, the pale blue of the t-shirt, and Noel's beautiful red hair go very well together.

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11-30-09 Look At Me: Affection

My good friend, Jack, has convinced me that I should post some of my portraits in this blog. I have resisted, in part because I didn't want this blog to seem like an advertisement for the portrait work I do from time to time. That's never been my intent. Sharing a few photos and a few thoughts is my intent. This week's series will be called "Look At Me."

This is one of my favorite couples shots - and it doesn't hurt to have good subjects like Alicia and Derek. This wasn't a planned photo. They were both supposed to be looking at me. But a few moments before I asked, "Ready?", Alicia looked up at Derek and I snapped the photo.

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10-25-09 Remembering Bernice

Of course, to my brother Mike, my sister Barb and me, she was "Mom." I'm sad to say that Mom passed away in the early hours of the morning today (October 25, 2009). Mom was 91 and we had spent the better part of the afternoon yesterday visiting her at the nursing home she lived in. Her passing was quiet, peaceful and appropriate. But I feel pain nonetheless, for I had not expected death to come so quickly.

There's more that I could say but I don't have many words right now. I'll let this photo of a my beautiful mother speak for itself.

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