Saturday, 3 October 2009

A first portrait assignment

Back in the spring, I, along with all my colleagues at work, found myself encouraged once again to donate 'lots' for our annual charity auction. The auctions have always been a great success, over the years raising several thousand pounds for charity. Each year some of my colleagues have donated their skills as well as more tangible things, such as an afternoon's gardening, a dog walking service and even a professional chef to come and cook a meal at your home!

This year, I made my own offer for the auction - as a challenge to myself I agreed I would donate my photography skills for a portrait sitting at their home, something which would cost well over £200 at a professional studio. I'd read several articles in magazines where a similar effect could be created in a brightly lit room at home, with a white sheet for a background, a decent flashgun and reflector together with some editing work afterwards in Photoshop, so I nervously agreed to offering my services on a best endeavours basis.

Landscapes and still lifes are more controllable than people, so this was well outside my comfort zone and I was anxious to see firstly whether people would bid at all, and secondly if they did, who would win and how much would they be prepared to pay? And then of course, what would they expect for their money and could I deliver the goods?

In the event, there was no last minute Ebay-style rush to buy, and if we'd had a reserve price then my offer wouldn't have sold at all! Not to be disheartened, I was pleased to hear a couple of bids come in and the winner was Ian, a colleague on my own team, who'd pledged £12 for a family photo shoot. Not a fortune but enough to make it a serious venture - the pressure was on!

Fast forward to today, much longer after the event that it should have been, but we finally found a convenient date for the shoot. So, over at Ian's house the furniture had been moved, the white sheets were in place covering the walls and floor, and Ian's two daughters were ready and extremely excited to be the two models for the morning!

Our photo shoot turned out to be great fun, the girls were naturals at posing for the camera and even disappeared twice to change clothes! I shot a number of portraits of the two girls together, some of them on their own, and some family shots with Mum and Dad too. We had some great laughs and really enjoyed ourselves, and the hour we'd planned flew by. Afterwards I had nearly 80 pictures to assess in Photoshop, with the hope of producing a dozen or so good enough to be enlarged and printed. This would take much longer than the shoot itself, but here are a couple which I'm already very pleased with:

Alice sitting for the camera
Alice and Grace together
The next stage is to share all the pictures which have worked out, and then see which they want to print out and in what format. I'm looking forward to see how they print up in detail. Will I do it again next year? - perhaps, we'll wait and see.

1 comment:

Michael Gradwell said...

Well done. I think plain backgrounds are generally better and yours have come out very well.