Portraiture: The Final Images

After deciding on the theme for my four images, I began thinking about how I wanted to go about achieving my goal.  I wanted to try and capture genuine emotion from my subjects, without it being forced or staged.  I think it’s so easy for photos to look staged (as obviously a lot of the time they are), but sometimes the emotion looks forced and therefore it kind of ruins the credibility of those emotions.  This was what I wanted to avoid.

I asked four of my friends to be the models for my images, and we all went out together one evening.  I searched for a little while to find a spot that I liked, that also had reasonable lighting.  It was very dark outside and ideally I didn’t want to use the flash on my camera, so I knew how important good lighting would be to increase the quality of my images.  Eventually I found a place that I liked, but I decided that I still wanted a bit of extra light, so I turned on the torch on my phone and got one of my friends to hold it (whilst one of the others was being photographed).  I then set the remaining two people a mission to make the subject laugh – something they were both more than willing to help out with.

I was a bit concerned about how well this would go – as I was very aware that my images could still look forced as a result of the subject knowing my goal was for them to laugh.  However, this turned out to not be a problem, as because there were five of us in total, we all ended up joking around with each other anyway and we were all non-stop laughing (even myself) for a lot of the photoshoot.  I managed to get my four images, and I was pleasantly surprised with the results.

IMG_8802-2

IMG_8831

IMG_8853-4

IMG_8900-2

I then decided to format my four images in the style of a triptych to showcase all of them next to each other (see below).  I tried to arrange them within the triptych so that the two zoomed images were in the centre, and the slightly more zoomed out ones were framing each side.

Portraiture Triptych - FinalThere are some things that I could have done better, such as improving the clarity of a couple of the images, but given the fact that this was my first proper nighttime shoot, I’m extremely happy with the results.  I also love how genuine their laughter is (it really was genuine!) and how they all seem to have a light in their eye (I assume from the torch on my phone).  I feel like I’ve achieved what I set out to achieve – capturing natural laughter within my photographs.

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *