Hi :D

I like your photos but I might add a few comments :D

I am not an experienced portrait photographer so don't take too serious 
what I write :D These are just my two cents :D

All the 4 pictures are great, but let me add a little critique to all of 
them :D

Belinda 1: I like the composition overall but the right (always talking 
about director's side) of the picture a bit too dark for me. Also her 
hand is too far from her head and it makes the picture a little weighted 
to the right. Also the background is a little disturbing, especially the 
bright line on the left. I was thinking about if the picture would be 
better if she doesn't looks directly into the camera but trough the 
window on the left.
Belinda 2: This is a really lovely picture. Again the left side is a 
little dark, especially under her hands. The brown part (probably the 
window's frame) is taking too much attention and it's a little 
disturbing for me.
Belinda 3: I really love this re-cut of the picture. Cropped differently 
from the previous version it brings me a whole new picture making the 
lovely atmosphere of the previous picture into a serious one! Wish you 
left just a little more room at the bottom. Overall this is my favourite 
from the 4 shots.
Belinda 4: The B&W conversion makes this picture fantastic. The tones 
and the dynamic range of the picture is excellent! Only two small 
comments about the picture: 1, I would leave more space at the bottom 
and less at the top and the right side. 2, the black line in the 
background is a little disturbing.

If you don't mind I might add a few tips:
Use the flash with a diffusor if the light comes from one of the sides. 
That would make the dynamic range of the photo better and would not 
leave the half of the face in shadow. With K10D you can lower the 
strength of the flash enough to only lighten the shadowy parts a bit.
In portraits I prefer shallow Depth of Field, that's why I shoot 
portraits with the widest aperture available (and probably that's why 
the 85mm/f1.2 lens were the most famous portrait lens ever made :D). 
With the 50-135 it would make the background nicely blurred.
Try to shoot portraits where the model is not looking directly into the 
camera. That makes a whole new feeling :D but remember to leave enough 
space for the look.

Hope my letter is not too offensive (I am not a native english speaker 
so sometimes it's a little hard to express myself in english :D) and you 
don't take it as too hard critique. All the pictures are great and I 
really enjoyed watching them especially with such a lovely modell you 
had ^.~

Cheers,
.timber


Christine Aguila wrote:
> Hi Everyone:
>
> Here are 4 informal photos of a dear friend of mine, Belinda.  K10D, 
> DA*50-135, all at 135mm, tripod mounted.  We had a bit of dress-up play.
>
> Belinda 1: 1/20 @ 5.6, ISO 100
> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=6981777
>
> Belinda 2: 1/8 @ 4.0, ISO 200
> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=6981804
>
> Belinda 3:  Heavy crop of above
> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=6981841&size=lg
>
> Belinda 4: 1/25 @ 4.0, ISO 280
> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=6981865&size=lg
>
>
>
> For a smaller version, here's the slideshow.
> http://photo.net/photodb/slideshow?folder_id=811484
>
> Comments & critique welcome.
> Cheers, Christine 
>
>
>
>   


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