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Showing posts with label Photography Facts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography Facts. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

10 Ways to Look Good in Photos


1. Focus your eyes just slightly above the camera lens, move your face forward a bit, and tip down your chin. 

2. Put your tongue behind your teeth and smile, which will relax your face. 

3. Keep your arms by your side—but not glued there. To look natural, they should be a little away from your body.

4. Test-drive clothing against a white wall, with an indirect, natural light source (under a tree, indoors near a window)—it will show whether blue really is your best color.
5. As a rule, avoid patterns.
6. Photos exaggerate everything, so go easy on the makeup. For women under 30, a little mascara and lip gloss; over 30, add a touch of concealer.
7. Practice the classic model pose: Turn your body three quarters of the way toward the camera, with one foot in front of the other and one shoulder closer to the photographer. When you face forward, your body tends to look wider.
8. For standing photos, belly in, buttocks tight, shoulders back, spine straight.
9. Study photogenic people as well as photos in which you think you looked best. Look at your best angle. You’ll probably see that you were laughing or having a good time. Capturing someone when they’re relaxed or most animated usually makes for the best results. 

10. To feel at ease, try closing your eyes, then opening them slowly just before the photo is taken. 

Best New Books: April 2009

History
It was one of the rare wars in which history judges the victors to have fought for a just cause, and to have achieved an outcome of unarguable moral clarity.

--(from the introduction by David M. Kennedy) World War II 365 Days by Margaret E. Wagner (Abrams, $29.95)
Current Events
Eric Harris wanted a prom date. Eric was a senior, about to leave Columbine High School forever. He was not about to be left out in the prime social event of his life. He really wanted a date. Dates were not generally a problem … His best friend, Dylan, had a date. How crazy was that?
--Columbine by Dave Cullen (Twelve, $26.99)
Adventure 
Great pans of multiyear ice, weighing millions of tons apiece, were on the move, causing towering pressure ridges to erupt all around us as they smashed into one another. It was as if hell had frozen over.

Photography
My people are Sacajawea's people. [My father] told me that as dancers, we represent our people, our tribe, when we go out to dance … The parts of the animals and birds we are wearing come alive again when we dance. --Rose Ann Abrahamson
--Faces From the Land: Twenty Years of Powwow Tradition by Ben and Linda Marra (Abrams, $30)
Memoir
Back in the Paleocene 1950s, when being fond of one's children had not yet come into vogue, poor people didn't seem to mind all that much if one of their offspring went flying out into traffic, as everyone had spares.
--Closing Time by Joe Queenan (Viking, $26.95)