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This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer’s Nirvana

For over a century California’s Yosemite Park has been a destination for families and everyone who enjoys the outdoors. With over 750,000 acres of stunning beauty, it doesn’t matter what time of year you are there, everything is beautiful. Enjoy these 26 photos of Yosemite and see what it’s a top destination for photographers.

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Soller Photo

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by stevewhis

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Christopher Chan

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by wbirt1

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Daleberts

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Christopher Chan

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Aypho

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Thomas Hawk

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by tfdavis

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Lee Otis

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Mohan S

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Steve L

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by SlapBcn

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by satosphere

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by ryan jay?

Photo by Steve Corey

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photoby ohad*

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by satosphere

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by AGrinberg

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by tibchris

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Cocoabiscuit

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Talke Photography

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by tibchris

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by FunnyFence

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by Swiv

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by dj @ oxherder arts

This is Why Yosemite is a Photographer's Nirvana

Photo by FunnyFence

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How to Plan the Ultimate Family Portrait

The traditional studio shot of families is fine, but boring as call can be! The reason very few people are excited about having a family portrait done is because they usually lack creativity, involve standing around with fake smiles and wearing a matching outfit with the rest of your family. BORING!

Taking the ultimate family portrait is about capturing moments within the family dynamic, it goes beyond lining family members up from tallest to shortest or putting on white button down shirts, khaki pants and sitting on a beach. Think outside the box and look beyond normal standards for ways to get a group shot unlike any other your family, or your client has ever seen!

How to Plan the Ultimate Family Portrait

This great family portrait has some unique characteristics about it. First of all, Flickr user RKHawaii was both photographer and model, this is a self / family portrait. He had a trigger in his hand to take the actual shot and utilized a strobe with a power pack to light it since the sun was at his back and he took an interesting angle, by putting the camera low he is able to capture the foreground, the mountains, sky and some of the solar glare from the sun for a really nice capture. You’ll also notice no one is looking into the camera. These more casual family portraits are the growing trend, they look far less staged and seem to tell a better story.

How to Plan the Ultimate Family Portrait

Flickr user Mhogan35 took a much different approach to shooting himself with his brother. This image has been heavily post processed, but at the core is a rather unique image. Location, attire and posing are the key factors in this photograph. It works extremely well due to the symmetry and emotion.

How to Plan the Ultimate Family Portrait

The anti family portrait! Flickr user 1Happysnapper (photography) uploaded this wonderfully rich photograph of a family where none of the faces are visible, yet this is still a family portrait at the purest sense of the word. Taking some bad weather into account and making the best of it, the use of large colorful umbrellas and punchy post-processing help transform a line of family members into a fun and quirky portrait.

To plan for these types of portraits you need to look for:

  • Opportunity
  • Location
  • Posing
  • Focus
  • Story

Examining these one by one, you look for opportunity to capture moments between making moments. By this, I mean don’t always expect to shoot the perfect family portrait by staging the shot, sometimes the best portraits are captured between the staging and positioning of all family members, or when someone cracks a joke, or makes a funny face. These idiosyncrasies are what make families, and how they remember each other.

When choosing a location, don’t pay as much focus to where you’re shooting, but how you will capture the family in that moment. Equally stunning photographs can be taken in a living room, garage, open field or studio, it’s how you pose the family and utilize them in relation to the location.

Directly in relation with location is posing, which has been mentioned here a few times. In the first example the family is very casual, almost as if they don’t know the camera is there. This style is often called photo-journalistic, but it can be posed. As a photographer, if this is the style you are after ask that your family just enjoy their company, shoot the breeze and forget you are there. In the second photo is a much more rigid pose, the two brothers are positioned to mirror one another, side by side. This is slightly more classic, but given the dynamic of the image, it works really well. In the last photo the family isn’t even facing in the direction of the camera and their faces aren’t visible. Think outside the box, look towards creative ways to capture people within the environment they are in.

The focus of a family portrait should always be the family but that’s not to say they need to be in focus, or even centered. The last photo is a prime example of this, however utilizing other photographic techniques like wide open aperture for a creamy bokeh can deliver breathtaking photos.

Every photo tells a story in some way shape or form. Each of these three examples tell you something about who the families are, what their relationship is like, where they live or what they like to do, and in the last photos, what happened that day. Step back and try to imagine in your head what words would be used if a monologue was being told while you were shooting this. What would you title the shot and what would a stranger take away from looking at it; more importantly, will the family look back years from now and remember how the air smelled or what the wind felt like by looking at your photographs?

This is a guide on how to shoot with passion more-so then an any particular technique. While specific techniques are required to capture the shot, when shooting people and families, how the moment is captured is ultimately the most import ingredient, and sadly one of the most over-looked by photographers.

lightstalking.com

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Portrait photography engenders mental images of the traditional head and shoulders composition shots that make up 99% of the genre, but portrait photos can be so much more. The funny thing is that most people’s favourite photo of a relative or loved one is rarely the head and shoulders shot, but rather an action shot or one of them in their natural surrounds.

That means there is an opportunity to add a special element of interest to any portrait photography. Here are a few ideas with our guide on 7 Ways to Add Interest to Portrait Photography.

Reflections An easy way to add both depth and interest to a subject is to shoot it in reflection. That means setting up near reflective surfaces such as glass, a mirror, water or a polished surface which can be found in almost any location. The reflection adds a point of interest and makes the portrait composition much more interesting.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Consider the Setting Let’s face it, sitting for a portrait in front of a screen is boring and has been done to death. Why not get outside where you can use natural lighting as well as the interest of the natural environment to create an interesting portrait? Shooting people in their natural environment such as at work is also another way to get a more natural looking shot.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Consider Your Lens Getting closeup portraits is one way that many people capture interesting shots of people. The shot below was taken with a Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 lens. If you want to take portraits this close, you might need to consider what type of lens you are shooting on.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Use a Prop A strategically placed item or even having the subject interact with an item can also produce much more interesting portraits. The shot below introduces the element of cigarette smoke very effectively to add interest and draw the eye to both the subject and elements of the background.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Underexposure - Intentionally underexposing your subject in portraiture photography can produce some very emotive images and will draw the view of the audience towards the lighter parts of the image. It also adds a gravitas to the image that is great if you are trying to evoke emotions of seriousness.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Overexposure - On the other hand, intentionally overexposing a subject will draw the eye to the darker areas of the portrait and produce very stark results. You quite often see this technique in magazine and fashion shots but it is easy enough to replicate if you like these types of photos.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Change the Angle Most portraiture photos are front on, head and shoulders shots. Maybe the easiest way to mix this up is to simply change where you are standing as the photographer. Get above the subject so that they are looking up for example. The shot below made what would have been an average front-on shot quite interesting simply by getting above the subjects to shoot.

7 Techniques to Add Awesomeness to Portrait Photography

Check out these other links on Portrait Photography:

lightstalking.com