K4kafka asked, in the Comments: "Over the years you’ve tested many cameras, lenses, and shooting genres. Do you now consider yourself a 'landscape photographer'?"
My answer is "it's what's available." I love photographing kids, but there are no kids in my everyday life, and although I got along well with kids in my younger days, I can't claim I do now. My "best thing" is portraits (if you ask me, anyway), but people take their own portraits with their phones now—I literally can't give portraits away for free, sometimes. I've asked three or four people recently if they would pose for a portrait, and they say yes and take my card but then don't get back to me. ("You know what they say: Oh well.")
I did do a portrait this past week, and it was fun to do. I photographed Kerry G., a friend I met on a dating site and went out with a number of times a number of years ago. She needs the picture for a website associated with a new job.
Kerry Graff. This is the one I liked, not the one Kerry liked.
Fuji X-T1, 56mm ƒ/1.2.
When I do a portrait, it's "personality not perfection." I like natural-looking pictures. I don't use a makeup person or a stylist, not that there's anything wrong with that. I don't make all sorts of changes in Photoshop—enhancing skin, enlarging eyes, etc. I work in natural light, and we try different spots, different light, sometimes different clothes (not this time), and I have people re-do their hair several times during the shoot. I want to give people a variety of looks in the proofs. It usually takes about an hour, and sometimes as long as two or three. I especially don't like it when they dislike something about the setup and it's in every shot.
That's the Allison R. rule. Allison was a willowy beauty with a great mass of big blonde hair, and she claimed that she liked her hair to be tousled and unkempt, so she didn't want to brush it, and she didn't use a brush through the whole session. We spent hours shooting nine rolls of 35mm film, an all-time record for me for a portrait...and, you guessed it, she didn't like her hair in any of them, thanks to one unruly strand that stuck out in all 300+ shots. That was before Photoshop, when you were pretty much stuck with what you got on film. Ever since then, I've asked women—men too, actually—to check their hair several times during a session. It doesn't have to be perfect, just different. Just in case.
I was going to give Kerry four proofs, but mostly we shot without her glasses on, and she ordinarily wears glasses. So at the last minute I included what I thought was the best glasses-on exposure. I had already picked my favorite frame by that time (the one above), and it was a glasses-off shot. Well, you guessed it again—she thought the shot with her glasses on was far and away the best one of the five. Good thing I included it!
I don't mind that, of course. She needs a particular look 'n' feel—it's a professional portrait, and she has a good idea of what she needs the picture to convey. She's also familiar with others doctors' portraits. So it's her choice.
Well, except here on TOP! Here, I get my way.
Mike
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Featured Comments from:
Jack Mac: "You definitely are a portrait guy. I still use one of your shots of me taken when we were shooting in an abandoned building in Milwaukee. It’s even better with age, since it makes me look ten years younger. Nowadays I prefer to not show people their photos for ten years, so that they can exclaim, 'You captured me perfectly!'"
Mike replies: One of the things Kerry and I discussed when we were talking about the edits of her chosen shot is that she knows she wants to use it for the next ten years. :-)
I recently had to supply new photos for a driving license. I found using a selfie from a phone very unsatisfactory. The camera had to be held too close to the face and the lens erred on the wide angle. I ended up with the Panasonic DC G9 on a tripod using the Panasonic Image App on my phone to review and shoot. I set the camera about 9 feet away and usd a bit of telephoto on the lens. Did the job
Posted by: Thomas Mc Cann | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 04:11 AM
"...it's what's available."
Exactly my situation. I lived all over the world, interacted with many types of unique people and saw some amazing sights. I have tens of thousands (no exaggeration) of slides documenting a fairly exciting and diverse range of subjects.
Today, out of necessity I call myself a minimalist photographer. I shoot man made subjects framed tightly while walking around my downtown area. No Japanese temples, no Big Bens, no nicely lit portraits, just interesting brick patterns or juxtaposed differential structures.
To quote some guy that I read somewhere... it's what's available.
Posted by: Albert Smith | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 08:42 AM
Very nice portrait. Better than your landscape pictures. In my opinion.
Posted by: Ilkka | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 09:32 AM
Nice portrait. I would have liked to see the one that Kerry chose. IMHO your landscape photos are nice - a bit quirky which I suppose is not everyone’s taste.
Posted by: Ken Rowin | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 10:50 AM
Would you / she mind sharing the ‘glasses on’ image just for comparison?
Posted by: Navin U | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 11:42 AM
Get it right in camera than you don't need Photo Shop. For me this means hair/makeup and a stylist. I also need to do the lighting, this is the difference between an amateur and a professional. You not luck needs to be in control.
The photo is for the client not you so do it their way. Your opinion does not mean anything.
Very few people actually need a real portrait aka a headshot. Checkout Kevin Major Howard's work.
Posted by: c.d.embrey | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 12:34 PM
A random question for the group. Whether it is Mike's landscapes or portraits, Albert Smith's tens of thousands of slides from around the word or minimalist images from his town, what is the long term plan? What are planning to do with it all?
Posted by: JOHN B GILLOOLY | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 03:18 PM
In response to JOHN B GILOOLY, my long term plan is to concentrate on the photos I have already taken
Posted by: Richard Tugwell | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 04:09 PM
You might have stumbled across something here, Mike.
Date lots of people with varying skills a few times and you then you can call them up and ask for favors when you need that skill!
Posted by: KeithB | Friday, 28 July 2023 at 06:17 PM