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Thursday, September 16, 2010

Peter Scoones - Legendary Underwater Cameraman!

There is little, if anything, that Peter Scoones does not know about underwater image making. A BAFTA and two Emmys surrounded by numerous other awards are testament to his creative achievements. But it is Peter's dual expertise in both beautiful, artistic cinematography and innovative technical wizardry which make him both unique and extra-ordinarily accomplished in this challenging field. His creative talent has taken him many times around the world for a string of unrivalled wildlife documentaries, many for the BBC Natural History Unit in the company of perhaps the greatest and most distinguished wildlife presenter ever known, Sir David Attenborough. However, he also designs, builds and maintains all his equipment and remains at the very cutting edge of his field today after an underwater career spanning nearly five decades.

He made his first film with an 8mm camera in a homemade Perspex box in the early 1960's, using only a mask, snorkel and fins. From there he has progressed to become one of the leading wildlife natural history underwater cameramen in the world. When I arrived to interview him at his central London flat he was designing a new viewfinder because the cameras he uses have changed their configuration. "Necessity is the mother of invention" says Peter, and never was it more applicable than to this exceptional man.

Born in Wanstead, North London in 1937 to a sailing family, a marine career seemed almost inevitable. After school he qualified as a naval architect but on subsequently passing the entrance exam to the Royal Naval College at Dartmouth for commissioned officer training, his eyesight was tested below standard. So, when National Service loomed, instead of two years as a naval clerk he signed up for nine years in the RAF "to learn something useful". That something was photography.

At the time, Peter was a serious racing sailor "I'm the sort of chap who is 100% involved in whatever activity I am doing, nothing else intrudes" he says. Posted to Singapore, he headed the RAF sailing team. The fast, keeled sailing boats became sluggish when coated in marine algae and hauling them up slipways was time-consuming and cumbersome. Instead, the team borrowed masks and snorkels from the Navy and scrubbed the hulls underwater. Having never previously considered what was under the yachts he raced, Peter observed the shoals of pretty, colourful fish feasting on the debris. Around the same time Hans Hass's boat moored nearby and Peter had a 'eureka' moment. Hass was already his hero and Hass's presence and the lovely marine life meant the area was probably a prime location for the beautiful images he had seen on TV and in the cinema.

So, after persuading the Navy to teach the basics on their O2 rebreathers they formed a diving club. "The RAF disapproved of diving, considering it a dangerous activity, but we ignored them" Peter grins. Due to limited equipment they became highly adept at snorkelling and learned to skip breathe. "I could hold my breath underwater for 3-4 minutes, I still do it. You can't film while breathing it disturbs you, makes you wobble". Due to the lack of kit, as a temporary measure using RAF machine shops, recycled aircraft oxygen tanks and various hoses Peter built a couple of aqua lungs. "Demand valves are fairly simple things" he says, with typical understatement and modesty.

Already hooked on the underwater world through snorkelling, Peter's first ever dive, off Palau Tekukor nearly 50 years ago, was not without drama. Attached by rope "the tanks were very valuable, we didn't want to lose one" he floated down over the drop-off and with "wow" on his lips as a school of batfish wafted gently by he was completely captivated. With his skip breathing technique he stayed down far longer than expected for the air in the tank, so the crew began hauling the rope in. As he was being drawn inexorably towards a large cluster of nasty black sea-urchins, the stings of which can be very painful and indeed serious if multiple, he planted his feet firmly on the wall and pulled as hard as he could. Not only did his first dive feature beauty, awe and danger, he also incurred the wrath of the Far East boxing champion who he pulled into the water on the other end of the rope.

Peter was keen on both wildlife and photography since school days, so it wasn't long before his joint passions of image-making, diving and nature came together. Ever inventive, he would scavenge discarded, scratched aircraft windows returning them to stores and claiming a replacement, thus acquiring pristine sheets of Perspex to model housings from. He made cement from Perspex chips dissolved in chloroform, controls from used hydraulic linkages and created waterproof shafts - this was before o'rings were widely available. Unlike today when you can buy a housing off the shelf, there was nothing for it then but to build his own and in this he was truly a pioneer. "There was the Rolleimarin designed by Hass but that was way outside our budget, Nikonos which evolved out of Cousteau's Calypsophot didn't emerge until 1963, necessity is the mother of invention - if it doesn't exist, build it". There was that signature phrase again.

Tending towards moving film he housed a Bolex C-8 8mm cine camera and shot his first travel piece. He then moved from Singapore to Aden in the Red Sea and created his first feature film 'Breathless Moments'. This won the gold medal at the first Brighton film festival in 1965 and led to several production companies contacting him wishing to distribute the film. But, with great disappointment it transpired the 8mm media was not production quality and could not be used commercially. Peter immediately rejected 8mm, bought a 16mm camera and says "I could never afford to film for myself again. The film was so expensive I had to get paid in order to fund it".

Around this time he co-founded the British Society of Underwater Photographers (BSoUP) with Colin Doeg. Colin, a journalist at the time, has himself contributed significantly to British underwater photography including taking the first picture in British waters ever to win an open international underwater photographic competition. BSoUP is still going strong today boasting membership from many of the foremost underwater photographers in the UK. Having just celebrated it's 40th anniversary, Peter and Colin are still both regular attendees at the meetings in London, a testament to the down to earth nature of both these amazing men.

Says Colin "being a superb camera mechanic as well as accomplished photographer helps Peter handle with aplomb the most dreaded event in any underwater photographer's life... a flood. It is an unforgettable experience to see him calmly pour pints of sea water out of his custom-made camera housing and begin to salvage his expensive video camera anywhere on land or sea. Surrounded by an awe-struck audience and often an ashen producer or client - he can strip his camera down to its carcass, wash and sun-dry all the vital electronic circuit boards and have it working again in as little as a couple of hours".

Colin continues "Peter is hugely talented and is probably the most self-sufficient wildlife underwater cameraman in the world. He has introduced many new ideas, including the use of polecams and cameras slung beneath radio controlled rafts. In the early days in the UK he pioneered the concept of standard sized openings in the body of housings so the ports were interchangeable, something we all take for granted today. He also used to produce correction lens from raw Perspex and blow his own dome ports".

At the end of his nine year stint he left the RAF and joined a colour laboratory in London. For the next few years he absorbed as much as possible about underwater filming. To supplement his strong technical background and optical knowledge he thoroughly researched and read everything ever written on the subject, teaching himself. "I learnt from anyone who could tell me" he says, "I was a sponge, soaking up everything that I needed".

During this time Peter became involved in a production company and continued to push the boundaries of underwater filming. Combining his by now extensive knowledge with an electronics expert colleague, they invented systems for the oil industry. One such project was developing inspection cameras for the BP offshore oil platforms. The only other equipment in existence was inadequate for the low visibility of the North Sea. So, necessity calling again, they developed a camera based on the silicon-intensified technology being used by NASA which functioned in low-light and worked remotely from the platform without the need for divers.

Their reputations spread and one day there was a knock on the door of the workshop in Richmond just outside London. It was David Attenborough (subsequently to become Sir David) and a colleague from the BBC Natural History Unit who wanted to film a live coelacanth in low-light conditions, something that had never been done before. The primitive looking, pre-historic coelacanth, which usually lives around 1,000ft deep, was only re-discovered in the last century after scientists thought it had become extinct along with the dinosaurs, 65 million years earlier. Attenborough was heading to the Comores islands as part of the BBCs 'Life on Earth' series to follow up reports of local fishermen hauling coelacanths up from the deep. He had heard about Peter's camera and wanted to hire it. Peter seized his opportunity. Not only had he read about the coelacanth in school and long harboured an ambition to film it, but he also knew his camera was a completely unique and innovative asset that he was certainly not going to hand over for someone else to use. "I told them they could have my equipment for free" he recalls "as long as they paid for me to go out with them and operate it".

Thus began Peter's long standing involvement with the BBC including 'Reefwatch', 'The Trials of Life', 'Sea Trek', 'Life in the Freezer', 'The Blue Planet' and 'Planet Earth' which was the first broadcast in high definition, among many others. 'Reefwatch' filmed in the northern Red Sea was the first ever live underwater broadcast. At the time, production quality camera heads were not integrated with any recording device, thus filming was achieved by passing the image back to the surface where it was adjusted and recorded. The BBC technicians in Bristol were developing their own cameras "but their knowledge was limited" Peter recalls "I knew their equipment wasn't going to suffice, but they were disinclined to listen to a external freelancer. So I made my own camera. It was less snazzy and elegantly engineered than theirs, but it out-performed them every time".

During 'Sea Trek', Peter enhanced the polecam which he had originally invented for filming killer whales in Norway for an Australian broadcaster. The whales would not approach if there was a diver in the water so Peter put the camera on a pole over the bow of an inflatable boat and drove right up to the creatures. The resulting film, 'Wolves of the sea' included the first recording of whales 'carousel feeding', herding the herring into balls near the surface then using their tails to stun them before scooping them up. With the modern proliferation of wildlife films and tourist excursions this kind of behaviour is now observed by a wide audience, but then it was completely new. The film went on to win the annual Wildscreen Festival. For 'Sea Trek' Peter used the polecam to film dolphins in the Bahamas coming towards the boat rather than going away, this was yet another first.

Peter's next invention was 'the dog'. He developed remote capability by buying a broadcast quality recorder and housing it, connecting it to the camera by umbilical wire and ensuring the unit was neutrally buoyant so it would follow him in the water. He developed the camera control system from scratch, making a colour viewfinder so he could control the image. No longer was he reliant on an onshore technician. This was a revolutionary development and used right up until the BBCs spectacular 'Life in the Freezer' displaying life in the Antarctic in 1993, again with David Attenborough. Around this time broadcast quality camcorders became available which Peter housed so everything was finally all in one unit.

The following years brought a great variety of projects including, in 1995, 'Great White Shark' portraying the natural behaviour of great whites in California and South Africa. He still considers this to be the definitive depiction of these magnificent creatures, and as usual expresses this with no arrogance, simply as a fact. Peter is often accompanied on filming projects by his wife Georgette Douwma who is a highly accomplished photographer in her own right. The couple compliment each other delightfully with the ease and comfort of very good, old friends and also provide support and strength where needed.

The BBC's blockbuster series 'The Blue Planet' came next and Peter's skills were described by Sir David Attenborough thus: "Peter has a remarkable gift of composition. He understands fish just as other cameramen understand chimpanzees. He knows fish so well he can sense what they are going to do. You can see it in his footage. He moves as the fish move. We told him to go to his favourite destination and produce the footage for a film," Attenborough says. "We would construct the story to go with it. He went to Sipadan and the resulting film won a Palm d'Or at the Antibes film festival in France."

Peter's most recent, major involvement was with yet another BBC/ Attenborough landmark 'Planet Earth'. This was right at the forefront of technological advancement using High Definition (HD) technology for the first time. Aware of technical limitations on 'The Blue Planet' the series producer Alastair Fothergill approached Peter a year before filming and asked him to build the HD housings. Peter feared he would invest much time and effort creating high quality, top-end equipment only to see it hired out to other cameramen rather than filming himself, a prospect he was distinctly uncomfortable with. On assurance he would be fully involved he went ahead with the build, only to find some of his fears were realised with less involvement than expected. Apart from the frustration, this had a very real effect on his income. To balance this, after 'Planet Earth' wrapped up, rather than the equipment remaining with the BBC as is usual Peter insisted it be returned to his ownership and he now hires it out himself, maintaining it, continually developing it and still shooting himself where possible. His current involvement is with the BBC's next great wildlife epic entitled simply 'Life'.

Peter's long and prolific career has not been without hazard, like the time he was speared by an elephant trunk in the murky waters of the Okavanga Delta while filming for Planet Earth leading to extensive dental work. His life has been at risk from wildlife too many times to mention here, but he approaches these natural dangers with a typical relaxed philosophy. However, there is something he admits to being frightened of. "Ropes and regulations can kill you" he explains. "Once when filming a cable burying device the HSE advisor insisted I was attached by rope which I could not independently release. I blankly refused and eventually he compromised so I could release it myself. Sure enough, the rope became trapped under the bulldozer-like vehicle and I was drawn towards the burying device. If I hadn't been able to release it I would be dead, without question. When I surfaced, he angrily declared he would rather have a dead diver in the water than someone surfacing unexpectedly. I have been terribly anti- HSE, not to mention ropes, since then".

Peter is intensely environmentally aware. He eats fish, but not reef fish "it seems a bit of a nonsense to go filming them then come back and eat them". He also invests clean-up time on a reef before filming, clearing discarded fishing lines and ropes "it's amazing how much rubbish comes from boats, often operated by ex-fishermen who regard the sea as somewhere to dump rubbish. They don't have an understanding of the reef or what we want to see on it, because they don't see it".

It would be forgivable if this outstanding and uniquely talented man were to have a sense of arrogance or conceit about his many pioneering and unprecedented achievements. Not so. Peter is a true genius, but still more than happy to share his knowledge and discuss any topic with openness and generosity. "I'm just a chap who is learning how to take excellent pictures underwater" he says. It sounds falsely modest, but he really means it.

Study Via an Online Digital Photography Course

Creativity will be discovered in the most effective way by any online digital photography course for all those who are serious about going after a career in the art arena. In fact, getting name and fame along with financial stability is exactly what absolutely everyone thinks of. Being a virtually risk free business, photography is a field that is based on the expertise of professionals in conjunction with determination and effort. Gone are the days when individuals needed to rely on the employment opportunities. In fact, you'll be able to select your business timings and working inclinations as per your convenience. Studying any one of the professional courses will likely be of immense help to you.

Attend a Digital Photography Class

Almost all of the reputed institutes provide latest programs on digital photography by conducting workshops in select places. As an enthusiast, you need to attend this type of workshop that can help you in understanding about the positives and negatives of understanding digital photography. You can start attending online digital photography class soon after getting convinced about the features. Keep in mind that anyone can develop your abilities just by learning in addition to practicing a profession. By picking an online course, you will get the benefit of saving time and studying at the comfort of your home or office.

Sharpen Your Abilities by Studying Online

Professional courses are ever more offered by several institutions and online digital photography course is just one among them. But, when you begin attending this sort of course, you'll be left astonished to know about the facts you have been ignorant of till date. You could benefit a whole lot by pairing work exposure to the newly gained knowledge. Many an expert have gained in this way so you can also be one of them. You can readily reference other websites so you can stay updated with the present trends in the field of photography.

Turn Your Passion into Profession

Online digital photography class can be attended by everyone who's motivated with a passion to excel in this field. For almost all recognized photographers, it all starts with a favorite pastime or even a passion that happens to be their actual profession at some or other point of time. Each class will be held with advanced course material that targets content that is meant to greatly improve your understanding about photographic skills. The web based course helps anyone who has got a hectic agenda and can't enroll in regular classes.

Best Way of Getting Familiar with Photography

Picking an online digital photography course that satisfies your needs is something that you should do first. Evaluating this element needs a lot of time as you've got to undergo diverse courses provided by different institutes. You can find courses at novice level which can be finished in couple of weeks. If you are still a starter, then you need to choose such kind of courses. However, you can find expert courses for individuals who are already into the business to ensure that more knowledge could possibly be developed accordingly.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

jmmv-foto-digital2010.mpg

Video zum FotoDigital Fotoseminar vom Jugendmedienverband MV eV in Güstrow vom 16. bis 18. April 2010. Kamera und Schnitt von Marco Herzog



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwalB0a-bg8&hl=en

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Image Archiving - HDR and RAW Formats

HDR and RAW formats are effectively digital files that are used only for storage.  Neither format provides a useful image for purposes of display.  So which is better for archiving my high dynamic range files.  It pays to know how these storage or capture formats differ in order to make an informed decision.

In an earlier article I wrote that a single RAW file captures around 10EV in dynamic range while a 32-bit HDR file captures a virtually unlimited tonal range through the application of floating point luminance values.  This translates into around 76 orders of magnitude in dynamic range, far exceeding the luminance found on even the brightest sunny day.  HDR files capture a true high dynamic range.

Because the HDR file is lossless, one might think that it provides a better storage solution than a RAW file.  Perhaps. The problem lies, however, in the simple fact that the creation of an HDR file from a RAW file depends on the conversion software one uses.  Merging three to five RAW files into a single HDR merged file will give different results depending on the software one uses and even between different versions of the same software as later versions generally provide more sophisticated results.  Merging algorithms are proprietary each having different working thresholds for pixel conversion; each algorithm, therefore, produces a slightly different result.

In the final analysis, archiving RAW files as source images is superior to archiving HDR merged files, however, RAW files are subject to degradation over time so I recommend that one use a redundant backup system.  I use an off-site backup as well as backing up my RAW and HDR files on DVDs.  While RAW source file storage and backup is ideal, I also recommend that one store converted HDR merged files, especially if one works with a single vendor's software.  I work with Photomatix Pro exclusively so I find that storing my HDR merged files as well as the RAW source files provides me with an ideal solution.  I don't believe one can take too many precautions when storing important image files.

All that being said, remember that the converted HDR file is not useful as an image file for purposes of display.  Displaying a 32-bit HDR file on a low dynamic range computer monitor one finds that the displayed image has apparent areas where the highlights are completely blown and the shadows are completely clipped; details of the HDR image are not apparent in the display of the HDR merged file on a standard computer monitor.  Tone mapping of the HDR merged file is necessary, not only for viewing the details on your monitor but is also a requirement if one wishes to print the merged image.  Tone mapping, in its simplest terms, is a way to convert the 32-bit HDR merged file into a 16-bit TIFF file or an 8-bit JPEG file that is now useful as an image for viewing and printing. 

Monday, September 13, 2010

Bali exotic photo workshop / e-Fotografija.si

e-Fotografija Exotic Photo Workshop - Bali island Indonesia



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FahzWRTiuCg&hl=en

Why Printing on Canvas is So Special and Popular?

First of all it is worth saying that any digital image printed on canvas is much higher grade than a usual photo. Actually canvas printing represents the highest possible quality. Due to up-to-date technology high quality canvas, vivid and lifelike ink colours any photo transformed onto canvas can look as much real as a lively description of the image. In addition paper photographs size is limited, with canvas it is extremely wide range of size possibilities. On top of everything, life expectancy of a canvas picture print is several times higher in comparison with a photo and moreover you can afford it. The result you get is worth the effort. It only takes one's desire to do it. There are many areas of our life where canvas picture prints can play a significant role.

Home gallery

That is the only salvation for people who dream about home gallery but possessing genuine paintings is more than they can afford. Framed canvas is just great and they look almost the same with genuine art unless you don't compare the prices. You can create a little art gallery at your home and the money you pay for it would be still reasonable.

Nowadays canvas pictures are even widely seen in art galleries and in many museums, because putting art photos on canvas makes great impression on viewers.

In case you don't dream about personal home gallery, you can convert some of your best photos onto canvas just to obtain a perfect atmosphere.

For gifting people

Sometimes people beat their brains out trying to solve the problem of gifting. A lovely canvas print will meet everybody's wishes, because it is beautiful, romantic and practical, judging by its longevity. The only thing which is up to you is to pick the right image for it. Also it can become a desired gift for you.

A good way to advertise

Advertisement plays a major role and your production needs sales promotion. Using outdoor advertising enables to draw attention of public at large. Canvas print allows playing with colours, images, and you can choose your own way of sending messages through the artifact. It is rather affordable; cost of the canvas photos depends on the size of the image.

But remember the process of printing a photo on a canvas can be made simple only if you work with an experienced and helpful service provider. To climb success

If you are a professional photographer and like interesting new techniques, you would probably put your photos on canvas and would not regret it. Also it is a good idea to expand your business. You can offer two great services instead of one: photographers and photos on canvas conversion. Just stuff your workshop with the professional device and start transforming photos to canvas. If you offer phenomenal canvas photo prints with simply outstanding quality you will make great strides, because plenty artists, businessmen and ordinary people are amazed by canvas. Go ahead and make your choice. Good luck!

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Photography Success Without School

What I learned from a mentor that enabled me to go from an amateur photographer to a professional portrait photographer in very specific steps is something I like to pass on. Rather than spending countless hours in classes learning every possible detail, I learned just the necessary specifics and now I work out of my home full time and have been in business for over 17 years, but I started out with practically nothing; just an interest in photography and the need to earn more money.

For one thing, my mentor taught me the Three Classic Elements to produce "salable portraits."

"Salable" is an industry term every photographer quickly becomes familiar with to distinguish between the everyday reality of making money versus creating those "artistic competition" or "award winning prints" which don't earn the money.

I've been in the business for over 17 years now and I'm still amazed that:

People don't buy the award winning prints that you see wearing many of the ribbons at professional photography conventions.

When my clients are faced with the choice of buying an artistic pose of their child being demure and not looking directly into the camera or buying a pose smiling close-up straight into the camera, they buy the smiling close-up every time.

Not very original, but I'm telling you now so take note:

Happy people whose faces you can readily see are the most salable prints.

They'll never tell you this at a photography workshop, seminar, Annual Convention or at a photography institute because their job is to create award winning photo artists rather than people whom simply make a living, but... if you haven't learned all the fancy lighting techniques, then you've saved time because the most important thing about light is having enough to keep the face out of the shadows.

People prefer any kind of light, as long as there is enough of it to light the face and eyes so you can get a good look at the person!

The quality of light people prefer for portraits is soft light, whether it be from an artificial source like a flash umbrella or a natural source from the sky at sunset, but other than a soft quality of light they want enough of it to SEE the face of the person you're photographing, even if it is a flat almost straight on technique.

You may not win any competitions or awards this way, but if you get plenty of light on the faces you'll create salable prints.

This leads me to talk about fill flash. There are times outdoors when you'll need a flash on your camera to fill in dark shadow areas mostly in the eye sockets. Just use one f stop less flash than the existing ambient light calls for. That's enough light to fill the shadows and don't worry about not lugging around a portable umbrella to get the perfect modeling technique.

My mentor is right again: there is no change in the sale. The customer pays for well lit faces, not perfect modeling. I've tried it both ways and the customer buys the same amount of pictures in the same sizes no matter what you do.

Element number Two: Body Positioning.

This is a little more detailed area, but it is important, believe me.

My basic education from my mentor began with the same advice I'll pass on to you:

You should rarely photograph anyone straight on.

The exception to this rule will be for family and large groups, which for reasons of body placement will often break this rule. But for individuals or smaller groups of people this rule applies.

Now, when you're not just photographing a head and shoulders close-up you'll have to understand other aspects of body positioning that makes people want to buy their pictures. Hands. They should always be turned slightly so they are seen from the edge with fingers together, or hide the hands altogether behind your subject or somebody else next to them. Never position hands straight on with open fingers.

Simply put, anything that minimizes how much hand you see works to make it a better portrait. This is always more flattering in a portrait and you'll see they are the ones people buy.

Crossing legs at the ankles refines the pose and minimizes this area of the body making it more appealing.

Look at it this way, what's less of a distraction: two legs leading to two ankles leading to two feet -- or two legs blending into one ankle section with blended feet? Surely it's the latter.

When standing, one cannot simply cross their ankles unless they have something to lean against, so I will have one foot in front of the other in such a way that they taper into one general unit. Have them place their weight on the back leg (remember, they are at a slight 3/4 angle) and bring the front leg forward and slightly tilt the foot to face out toward the camera.

Whenever I'd show my mentor my portraits that I was just unsure of, it was these recurring themes that he patiently pointed out to me.

As I began to look for these simple things during my portrait sessions, my pictures got better!

I can't stress enough how basic, but important, it is to watch for these details.

I have people come to me who went to the contract photographer for their High School Senior yearbook portrait and disliked their picture. They want me to take one that they can proudly give out to friends and family. Usually the problem with the pictures I've seen is that the photography school graduate "intern" who works for the contract photographer took the photo without paying attention to some minor detail. I get it right and my reputation grows from "fixing" the contract photographer's mistake.

The techniques for salable body positioning are what you look for in any pose you try whether close-up or full body.

When photographing people full body standing, seated or reclining on the ground, noticing body angle, hands and feet is the way to "fine tune" your portrait and distinguish it from just a "snapshot".

Lastly, I must share my favorite body positioning tool that makes it so easy to make a better portrait than someone who doesn't really know what they're doing: the head tilt.

A woman alone tilts her head just slightly in either direction to make a more stunning portrait. A man's head can stay straight up or tilt slightly away in the opposite direction from his most forward shoulder but never back towards his most forward shoulder.

Element number Three: Salable Composition

There are many compositional techniques in many books, but it doesn't take all that knowledge to make portrait compositions that are what the typical consumer considers good enough to call professional.

Once you know what the consumer considers salable, you will be able to reproduce it again and again for other clients. You also will thank me for saving you from thinking that in order to be good enough to sell portrait photography you have to create grand artistic images. You just have to know what works and be able to repeat it for the friends of your clients whom will be getting your business cards by way of referral.

When photographing one individual person, it's so simple I don't think you need too much input for that. In fact, I believe you know the naive simplicity with which you thought "hey, I can do this for a living" after taking some portraits of a friend or family member. Yet it truly gets challenging when there is more than one person involved.

I know of a local professional who has referred family portrait clients to me as she specializes in children outdoors. Do you know what that really means? It means she's intimidated by having to do groupings, but that's okay, most people are.

So here's the rule of salable composition:

Keep everybody's head at a different level.

Like I told you, I didn't have a fancy College degree so my mentor had to keep it simple enough for me. In some cases, you will recognize that it's not possible, but if you do your best to stagger head height from individual to individual, you will be creating professional looking images.

You will stand some people, seat some in chairs, seat some on the arms of chairs, seat some on the floor, kneel some, crouch some, lay some down, but you will achieve staggered head heights and salable compositions.

Tip heads inward toward one another for unity when photographing a family group.

Note that men are usually positioned higher than women.

No, I'm not aware of being a chauvinist pig, but I am aware that this is what usually sells. Not the images where mom's higher than dad but where dad (even if he's actually shorter!) is positioned just a head or so above mom.

Once you understand the rules, you can bend them where you need to in order to make a portrait work; but people will see that you know what you're doing as you position them for a good composition and especially when they see your finished work.

My mentor critiqued my work time and time again over several years as I brought images and questions to him. It almost always boiled down to my understanding these most simple aspects that I've shared with you.

I know it's not customary to learn photography on such simplistic terms, but trust me; I've had exposure over the years to many different photography educational venues such as classes, workshops, conventions, guest speakers, lectures, teaching videos and books but never have any of the teachers been willing to simply say "look, there are just a few rules to follow and people will be happy with their pictures". Never have I received more helpful advice than I received from my mentor.

I guess if I could sum up the philosophy he embodied in word form I'd say it was rather like this:

"Not everybody wants a masterpiece. Most people just want to remember their loved ones as happy. It's not hard to capture that with your camera, just don't stand them in hard sunlight, standing in a straight line facing straight toward the camera."