Excellent shot in #1, Kim....
Excellent shot in #1, Kim....
Thank you Jack. The awkward park for me, was trying to make him comfortable since we didn't understand one another; he thought being in front of the camera meant he needed to be serious. If I had more time, I think we would have gotten to that comfort zone. I hope to photograph him some more when I bring him the photo.
Up close, you could tell the shirt was also worn; however it was pressed, and the sleeves rolled up perfectly. He takes tremendous pride in what he does and their farm is immaculate. I did try it in B&W, but personally preferred the color version. I did say a couple of the few Spanish phrases I know, and we both giggled about it.
Kim - I shoot exactly the same way. The first decision I will always make is the ISO I plan to shoot at, and 95% on the time that is the base ISO.
The only time I will shoot auto-ISO is when the lighting conditions are highly variable and I know that base ISO is going to get me into trouble.
Just wanted to offer a tip that I learned many years ago living in a rodeo town when taking candids of people in cowboy hats.
Turn your camera upside down. Doesn't matter what type. Doing that puts the flash below the lens and shoots some light up under the brim eliminating the shadow you normally get.
That's a great tip, Andrew, for anyone not using an off-camera flash. What do you do if you're a klutz like me and then can't operate the shutter release, much less find the back-button auto focus?
Lovely portrait. Agreed that a bit more "grit" to his face may be an option to explore...
Marie
I wrote this before I read the story:
Artistic: It is in the eyes and it is in the Facial Expression. You nailed the moment. You got both Rapport and also Trust. You captured the Emotion.
Technical: Excellent in all aspects.
Brava.
I anticipate this is an unknown person - if so then it is MORE THAN most likely that you have developed your Style and also your Skill to a point where your camera is, or is becoming an extension of yourself.
One of the next Critical Comfort Zones to consider pushing is street work - not "Sniping" but Candid Street Portraiture - up close and personal to record the personality, at the moment.
***
I wrote this after I read the story:
I disagree on both points:"When I lifted my camera and in an awkward way asked if I could take his picture, he just beamed."
You might have thought it was awkward - I'll bet a Mars Bar that he didn't - see my comment above.
He didn't "just beam".
He gave much MUCH more than that - and you captured it.
It is all in the eyes and then the expression.
There is pain and also there is suffering, too.
WW
Thank you for commenting Bill. You are correct, I didn't know him, this was the first time I met him. I know you had mentioned to me before that I should consider candid street portraits. I'm going to push myself hard to get past my discomfort with that and give it a try.
As for awkward, it did feel awkward to me - I didn't want to make him uncomfortable, but I wanted to get across what I was looking for. When you don't have language in common, you have to pull from other resources and get creative.
He hasn't had an easy life...
Body Language speaks louder than words - ask any Puppy, Colt, Kitten, Duckling . . .
The trick is to unlock the basic / child / animal instinct in the Subject.
Once unlocked and if positively connected, then Rapport and Trust are immediately attained. You achieved this, and that is why I referenced not only "Rapport" but also I referenced "Trust", which is another, deeper layer.
WW