....is getting better. Here is a quick scan of Theresa's official school photo. I like it, so I bought a few prints. This is not your typical flat lighting on a mottled blue canvas backdrop. I can even see shadows/highlights on her face. Even the camera position is correct for a headshot - level with the nose. Not bad for school photography, which is generally recognized to be at the bottom of the photography food chain.
What's going on here? Photography is hot! Back in the stone age (the 1990's) most people I knew didn't even own a camera. When they did take pictures (which was rare) they bought a disposable cardboard camera from the drug store. In this first decade of the 21st century, everyone has a digital camera. Now with millions of people taking pictures, it's inevitable that many of them have gotten serious. Combine this with the internet and sites like Flickr and you've got an explosion. Do you know how many DSLRs I see at a typical wedding? Guests with 1 -Series cameras? There are many sites (like the one you're reading now) where you can find lots of information to help improve your photography. Lots of forums and "groups". Joe McNally's "Hot Shoe Diaries" was an Amazon best seller. Crazy.
The other day I was cruising through the "creative commons" area of Flickr looking for examples of bad portrait photography to use on an instructional blog post. You know what? It wasn't easy! Most of the images looked pretty darn good. Chase Jarvis puts together a photography get-together and hundreds of photographers - most of them amateurs - show up. What does all of this mean? It means that your competition - both professional and amateur - is getting both more numerous and better. Here in Seattle there's probably two new photography businesses opening up every single day. That's not an exaggeration. Everything else is easier too. Equipment is better. Software is better. Instruction is better. You can buy a very attractive, clean and modern template website for $100. Everyone's using the same actions. New photographers (many of whom with backgrounds in the high tech industry) who know SEO get their websites on the front page of Google within a year of opening their business. Nikon's entry-level dslr - the $700 D5000 - has better image quality than it's top-of-the-line $5,000 professional dslr from just 2 years ago (Nikon D2x). I kid you not.
Better, better, better.
So what are you going to do about it?
You can do the same thing you've always done. Or you can step up your game! You've got to work on your craft. - buy a new piece of gear and learn how to use it - see if it makes you change the way you take pictures
- attend a few workshops (a self-serving piece of advice for sure, but that doesn't make it less valuable). learn first hand how someone else does things.
- grab a few models from ModelMayhem and set up some shoots to try out new ideas/techniques
- try this one: read your camera's manual from cover to cover
- never used off-camera flash before? learn how to use it!
- use off-camera flash all the time? put your strobes away for a month and learn how to creatively use natural light.
- waste too much time reading photography forums and surfing the net? go for a week without it. disconnect your computer from the modem. allow yourself 1/2 hour every day to respond to emails and that's it.
- is that 85mm glued to your camera body? grab a 24mm and shoot with that for a month.
- hate tilt/shift? great. go rent one for a weekend and take 3,000 frames with it.
- you don't like asking for the order? try the assumptive close at your next sales session "well Mrs. Jones, it looks like since you like at least 30 images from your portrait session we're going to have to go with an album".
- grab some friends and use a point-n-shoot for a few portrait sessions. it will force you to work a LOT harder to get professional looking images. once you go back to your dslr your images will have improved.
- you suck at posing? great. set up 10 sessions over the next 2 months where you pose every single shot.
I think you get the idea. Now just go do it!
Location Lighting 101 Seattle, WA January 23, 2010 2 seats left Laurence Kim Workshops |