Overall a very nice image, Jim.
We don't always need to have eye contact with the camera, so that is not an issue. The background is a bit messy and distracting, but that can be toned down a bit in post. Chopping through the fingers and hand is not great form either and the background looks like it is not quite level either.
A tighter crop would help reduce some of these "issues".
Absolutely beautiful lady... IMO, looking away from he camera gives her a shy appealing look that is becoming...
If you were in control of the shoot you could've had her move in front of a more compatible background or you could've moved, some of the background has elements which compliment the model's costume though. Crop does solve the messy background, nice effort.
My EXIF viewer no longer seems to work. I am wondering about the focal length and f/stop you used for this portrait...
If you had the equipment, this might have been an excellent place to use a longer lens with a very wide aperture such as an 85mm f/1.4 or even f/1.2 on a full frame camera. I am guessing that the combination of long focal length and wide aperture might have blurred the BG even more than it is...
IMO, the place for a really wide aperture portrait lens is when you are shooting in areas in which you cannot control the background. However, in studio work or when I am in total control of the BG, I prefer to shoot around f/5.6 or even f/8 with a 70-200mm zoom......
I have an 85mm f/1.8 Sony lens which I use on my APSC mirrorless cameras. It does a pretty good job working with a narrow DOF... I also have a Canon 85mm f/1.8 lens which I can use on my Sony APSC cameras adapted with a Viltrox EF-Eii focal reducer giving me an 85mm lens with an aperture of about f/1.2 or f/1.3. The focal reduction negates any crop factor...
Last edited by rpcrowe; 21st July 2019 at 05:04 PM.
Many thanks for all your comments, Manfred, Richard and John. I came across this scene unexpectedly and was the interloper, not the official photographer, so no way to direct where she and the other model stood. I shot between the helpers, so was quite restricted and took chances as they arose. We were in the Auckland Wintergarden. I had only one lens with me, a Sigma 17-70 2.8 to 4.0 (1.5 ratio for cropped Nikon sensor). My settings were ISO800; 1/100 sec; 70mms; f4.0.
Not too concerned about the background, as I can deal with that (though it would be very nice, if it was better). However, since in other respects you think it a good shot, then I will take the time to replace the background. My skills are up to that, at least