RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Pain’

How to Take the Pain Out and Put Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

04 Dec

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

Assembly-line photos are a whirlwind of craziness and fun. These can include school dance photos, team sports, drill team, preschool, business headshots, and anything else that involves a whole lot of people that you have to photograph the same way in a short period of time.

These sessions can be a nightmare if you aren’t prepared, and can be boring if you aren’t creative. I’m going to share some of my secrets for making these sessions some of your favorites and delivering photos that will please moms, coaches, teachers, and kids alike.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

1. Make a List

Before the day of your big assembly-line session, write out a list of exactly what you need to capture that day. Do not deviate from this list, especially if you have a large group. If you are working with teens especially, you’ll get requests for “just one more” picture, or requests to see what they look like in their photo. You might get requests to take photos not on your list, like best friends, or for a clothing change. If you want to keep your sanity, you have to smile, express how sorry you are, but give them a firm, “No”.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

My lists might look something like the following. You can use this list as a starting point, and adapt it to your needs.

PRESCHOOL FALL

  • Close-up face, horizontal
  • Reading a book, vertical
  • Holding an apple, vertical
  • Entire class – with teachers and without

PRESCHOOL SPRING

  • Close-up face, horizontal
  • Name o a chalkboard, vertical
  • Graduation gown, vertical
  • Entire class with teachers and without

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

PROM

  • Individual couples; up close, full length, something fun (they choose)
  • Group photos; smiles, serious, silly
  • All girls together, all boys together

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

SWIM TEAM

  • An individual photo in team jacket on the “blocks”
  • Entire team smiling, hugging, serious, silly
  • Each class (seniors, juniors, etc.) smiling, silly
  • All girls together, all boys together
  • Coaches together and individually
  • Individual fun photo (off the diving board, in pool, they choose ONE)

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

DRILL TEAM

  • Individual horizontal, vertical, and something fun (they choose)
  • Shots of “big sister” and “little sister” together
  • Entire team smiling, hugging, “model pose” with coaches and without
  • Each class (seniors, juniors, etc.) smiling, one more their choice

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

2. Stay Professional and Organized

Let everyone know right at the beginning how things will go, and keep everyone moving through quickly. It’s always good to have an assistant helping you line everyone up, and get the next in line prepared before they get in front of your camera. I usually use one of the coaches or teachers to help guide their kids, but you could bring a friend along too.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

Things can become chaotic quickly, especially with kids and teens. Be firm, decisive, and even a little bit loud if necessary. Let everyone know what is coming up next, and have them line up and wait for their turn so you aren’t trying to gather people every time you need to do the next photo.

If there’s something they need to decide (like what their class “silly” pose will be) warn them ahead of time, so they have time to prepare and think of something before it’s their turn.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

3. Give them a Chance to Show their Personality

Whether I am photographing the entire class, a team, a group together, or photographing each individual, I like to give them a chance to show a little bit of who they are.

If it’s a younger group, like preschool, the teacher and I collaborate to have something fun for at least one of the photos. We’ve done holding apples, writing their name on a chalkboard, graduation caps and gowns, reading a cute children’s book, sitting on a stack of books, etc.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

For organized team photos, I let them know that after we do all of the basic photos, I will let them each do one fun photo. For example, for the swim team, I give them two location options, either jumping off the diving board or in the water at the end of the pool.

Everyone who wants the diving board option lines up there, and everyone who wants in the pool lines up at that location. I don’t let them do both because if you start that, they all want to do both, and there’s just no time for it. Once they are at their location I let them do whatever they’d like to do, but they only have one chance, and only a few seconds to set it up.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

When school dance couples start to arrive, I let them know that they will be doing one “fun” pose together, and to start thinking of what to do. Many of them are “regulars”, and know that’s what I’ll be doing, so they come ready with ideas. If they can’t think of something, I give them a few ideas. They might go back-to-back, or make serious faces. Maybe one wants to pick the other one up. They could dance together, or make silly faces.

When I do the group silly pose, I don’t give them time to plan. There are too many kids, and they’d be there all day trying to agree on something. Instead, I take the regular smiling photo first, then a serious face photo, then I say, okay, on the count of three, something crazy! Then, I count to three as they hurry and do their thing, and then I snap about 10 photos or so and choose the best one later.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

4. Relax and Have Fun

It’s easy to forget to breathe, let alone remember to have fun when you are photographing 60 kids at the same time. However, it’s important that you don’t get too robotic with your assembly-line photos. If you can have a little bit of fun interaction with each person, you’ll get much better photos.

Help them relax, and you’ll get some genuine smiles that will be much better than those old school photos we used to get, where half of the time you were mid-blink, looking away, or not smiling. Assembly-line photos are a great way to get to know a whole bunch of wonderful people at once. Smile at them, and forget about the cheese.

Taking the Pain Out and Putting the Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

The post How to Take the Pain Out and Put Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos by Melinda Smith appeared first on Digital Photography School.


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on How to Take the Pain Out and Put Personality Into Assembly-Line Photos

Posted in Photography

 

TGIM SEASON 4 – PAIN IS TEMPORARY

16 Nov

YOU WILL NEVER LOOK AT TRIALS THE SAME AFTER THIS TGIM…Eric shares how the most trying circumstances in his life became the very things that catapulted him to success… General Info: info@etinspires.com SOCIAL Subscribe to our channel: YOUTUBE : bit.ly TWITTER : bit.ly FACEBOOK fan page : on.fb.me INSTAGRAM : ETTHEHIPHOPPREACHER SOUNDCLOUD : bit.ly TUMBLR : bit.ly WEBSITE : etinspires.com GOOGLE + : bit.ly AUTOBIOGRAPHY& Other Merchandise etinspires.com (store page) EtInspires Store Page : bit.ly APP — ANDROID : bit.ly APPLE : bit.ly AUDIO CDBABY : bit.ly ITUNES (MP3’s) : bit.ly AMAZON (MP3’s) : amzn.to e-BOOK ITUNES (e-BOOK) : bit.ly AMAZON (e-BOOK) : amzn.to Barnes & Nobles : bit.ly New intro song by Fame Or Juliet www.facebook.com Download link: itunes.apple.com Clothing provided by Sleep is 4 Suckers: www.sleepis4suckers.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

In this Episode Eric talks about how to roll with the punches life delivers. General Info: info@etinspires.com SOCIAL Subscribe to our channel: YOUTUBE : bit.ly TWITTER : bit.ly FACEBOOK fan page : on.fb.me INSTAGRAM : ETTHEHIPHOPPREACHER SOUNDCLOUD : bit.ly TUMBLR : bit.ly WEBSITE : etinspires.com GOOGLE + : bit.ly AUTOBIOGRAPHY& Other Merchandise etinspires.com (store page) EtInspires Store Page : bit.ly APP — ANDROID : bit.ly APPLE : bit.ly AUDIO CDBABY : bit.ly ITUNES (MP3’s) : bit.ly AMAZON (MP3’s) : amzn.to e-BOOK ITUNES (e-BOOK) : bit.ly AMAZON (e-BOOK) : amzn.to Barnes & Nobles : bit.ly New intro song by Fame Or Juliet www.facebook.com Download link: itunes.apple.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on TGIM SEASON 4 – PAIN IS TEMPORARY

Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Photographing Pain by Giovanni Savino

16 Oct

A work in progress: photographing pain.

It is reasonable to say that a photographer’s style and choice of subjects also depends on the emotional stimuli he or she was subjected to while growing up.

This concept made me look at my visual work from yet another, intimate, self-analytical angle.

photographing-pain-by-giovanni-savino-01

© Giovanni Savino

While I certainly love to portray beauty in my photos, whenever I am able to find it and see it, I think it would be honest for me to say that the majority of my subjects depict and portray an array of painful, difficult, controversial, uncomfortable emotions and situations.

I realize that human pain, whether blatantly shouted or quietly whispered, is, and has always been, the strongest conceptual magnet attracting my camera lens.

Existential and psychological pain was always present in my life, since my earliest childhood. I was able to address and resolve some issues while growing up, others are still unresolved to this day, in the sunset of my life.

photographing-pain-by-giovanni-savino-02

© Giovanni Savino

So I decided to embark in attempting to visually explore the pain and existential suffering I perceive and detect, at many different levels, in the majority people around me.

My ongoing photographic project has three main objectives:

  1. To focus as closely as possible onto the most diverse, often less obvious or less externalized expressions of suffering of the human spirit, mind and body; to humbly acknowledge such pain and to compassionately document it.
  2. To present the many faces of human suffering as an honest social study, to re-assert through my photographs the widespread existence of pain in a profit and technology driven society, which is often, either in denial of one’s suffering, or unable to organically accept the universal, unifying power of pain.
  3. To work on my own existential pain, find points of reference to other people’s pain and explore different strategies to cope with it. My angle of view is broad, in an effort to understand how we can accept pain as an inevitable part of life, while remaining able to appreciate the small and big blessings of our everyday existence.
photographing-pain-by-giovanni-savino-03

© Giovanni Savino

These are a few of the field notes I have been taking lately, as I started to build a body of work around this difficult, still under-studied, phenomenon of our lives:

  • Pain is a four-letter word.
  • Pain is probably the truest equalizer in our lives, regardless of our social, cultural or religious status. The rich suffers and so does the poor.
  • We all experience pain, mental or physical, at some point in our lives.
  • Pain is something we fear, we are not sure how to deal with, something we strive to avoid and to hide from others. Pain, in modern society has sometimes some implicit, unspoken connection, with shame.
  • We try drugs, meditation, psychotherapy, prayer, anesthesia and /or anything else to deal with pain or to avoid it altogether. Pain is scary.
  • The threshold or intensity of pain is not easily measurable; it is a subjective experience. When asked to describe our pain on a scale from one to ten, we all give a different answer.
  • The quality of pain and its manifestation is also very subjective.
  • Pain can be a piercing scream, a dull, almost silent moan and everything in between. Pain can be sudden, occasionally or last a whole lifetime.
  • In modern society there is a fairly common denial of suffering. Mental suffering in particular is usually associated with instability, madness, with a stubbornly widespread mental health stigma. This leads to ostracize the sufferer as an unreliable, dangerous and a socially undesirable individual.
  • A lot of pain goes undetected; a lot more goes untold and unheard.
  • Pain is sometimes invisible and well camouflaged but always ends up manifesting itself and acquires visibility when and where we least expect it.
  • Inflicting pain onto others is a common technique to coerce and control. From dictatorships to corporations pain is the most efficient form of manipulating peoples’ lives and beliefs.
  • Pain is sometimes associated with death but it is often feared more than death itself.

Giovanni Savino is a New York-based photographer and cinematographer specializing in editorial, documentary and portrait photography.

dslrBlog

 
Comments Off on Photographing Pain by Giovanni Savino

Posted in Photography