Hi Christine,
I think you did well. Half an hour and 60 frames is quite a bit, if you're 
shooting for fun. Number three is probably my favorite, I like the light on 
four. I might have told her to smile less broadly. Looks like she may have had 
a bit too much light in her eyes on most of them, yielding a bit of a squint. 
That's why backlight or shade is nice for shooting outdoors. But some good work 
here. Think about what you want and do it again.
Paul
 -------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Christine  Aguila" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Hi Everyone:  Anne is a colleague of mine, & I wanted to take some photos of 
> her, and fortunately she was very enthusiastic, and even said I could come 
> back again if I wanted a reshoot:  I find her lovely, & her eyes very 
> striking.  We met up at her house, & I had about an hour 1/2 to photographer 
> her on her deck.
> 
> But, something very interesting happened:  I actually got so bored--not 
> because of Anne; she was great and fun; she has a really great sense of 
> humor--rather, I was so bored with myself photographing her; creatively I 
> felt dead, and I don't know why--look how lovely she is!!!
> 
> My 1st guess at an explanation is that it was all starting to feel too 
> staged, and I think I feel I was kind of letting Anne down because of that. 
> Also, I'm so inexperienced at reading ambient location lighting and how to 
> best exploit it--& knowing this, I think all of a sudden I became extremely 
> self-conscious about this, and I think I had a little inner panic.
> 
> Anyway, in 30 minutes I shot 61 frames, and I then said, "Let's quit.  I 
> feel done."  And I so shocked myself that I said that.  We had a great 
> girlfriend visit over iced tea afterwards & Anne liked a good many of the 
> shots.
> 
> I've picked 5 to show you all here.  Anne 1, 4, & 5 are my favorites, with 5 
> being my number 1 fav.  In Anne 4, Anne is holding up a diffuser disk to the 
> right and out of frame (obviously ;-)).  Anne 3 & 2 aren't that great 
> because of the overwhelming highlights in the background.
> 
> All shot with K10D & the DA* 50-135mm & all hand-held.  I'm a little proud 
> of that latter.  I think I'm getting better at wielding that kit around: 
> K10D, battery grip & DA* 50-135mm.  Ironically, the battery grip, though it 
> adds weight, balances the kit for some better handling.
> 
> 
> http://photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=840824
> 
> Comment/s critique/thoughts very welcome.
> 
> Cheers, Christine 
> 
> 
> 
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