Thanks Bill, These were our plan to show off the dress and it's colour in the rural evening setting, with golden light. I specifically wanted a rusty gate fence to pick up the dress, her hair, the grasses etc.
Maybe the rural setting would make a nice landscape image and Georgie would make a nice portrait subject separately but together they work as well I think.
Being a canny young lass, in the social media world, my Fashionista daughter buys clothes or jewellery, I take photos of her wearing them, she posts them onto the company's social media sites.
Sometimes, often enough, they send her free items to wear as long as she posts more photos with the company 'tag's' in them.
She gets free stuff, they get free advertising, as she has a large # of followers.... win win
For sure, large reflectors and light modifiers are no fun at all if the wind is blowing. Even when it is not, you really need an assistant to handled managing those tools. A light stand with sandbags in a field is tricky to handle by yourself.
If there is too much whites of eyes, usually your subject not looking straight ahead, but rather is looking at something else. Having your model looking straight ahead fixes this issue.
The creases in the neck mean that you have had the model twist her head too much. Get her to turn in the opposite direction to stretch the skin more tightly and change your shooting position. That should fix that issue.
Exactly.
It's best to try to control that while shooting, as it saves a lot of time in PP. That being said, getting it 100% right during the shoot is nearly impossible, in my experience. Good PP tools are great for minor touch-ups.
You're welcome. I'm looking forward to seeing them.
Your daughter photographed very well...My vote goes to #2 as if I have to choose. (Yesterday I have been looking at Colin's old portrait tutorial and saw your inputs there...)