Home Forums Am I a Fauxtog? Just for Fun

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  • #2671
    Karalee
    Participant

    I’m obviously nowhere near professional, but I thought I’d go ahead and get some opinions. I’ve had my DSLR for about 8 months, but I’m currently a student and have a job, so I don’t have as much time to work on my photography as I would like to.

     

    https://www.facebook.com/KaraleeScoutenPhotography

     

     

    #2699
    Nightrose
    Participant

    The good: Your portraits overall are quite good, and I particularly like the first black and white shot of Sarah holding the 2013 sign – nicely composed with interesting bokeh in the background. I also really like the girl holding the mask to her face in Wall Photos. You also seem to have quite a flair for action/movement shots – the muddy water splashing, the dancers and the kids playing.

    The not so good: There are quite a few photos in your albums which look out of focus (unless it is Facebook which has destroyed them). For portraits it is better to use a single focal point, and aside from a few exceptions, the eyes should pretty much always be in focus.  Your wedding album is, in my opinion, the weakest, because there are a lot of pics which don’t have great focus or look grainy/oversharpened. Wedding photography is super challenging as everything happens so quickly, and you have one chance to get it right, with no do-overs. It isn’t something to be taken lightly and not everyone is cut out to be a wedding photographer (which isn’t to say you can’t try!).

    A few pieces of advice:  The colours in your photos are nice and vibrant, but do keep an eye on the saturation levels as they are on the borderline of being too much. If you can and haven’t already done so, get your monitor calibrated – you can buy calibrators that are relatively cheap and do a good job. Spyder4 Express is $120.  Also, and this isn’t always easy to do: be ruthless in what you show in your public albums; only display your very best work, even if you have to cull the majority of what you’ve done. Quality over quantity in this case 🙂 I’d rather see an album with 5 amazing photos than one with 20 so-so ones mixed in.

    Overall I think you’re doing really well and I’d recommend that you focus on portraiture and action shots as these look to be your areas of strength. Photograph what you love, and you will get better and better with time 🙂

     

     

    #2754
    Karalee
    Participant

    Thank you so much for your opinions 🙂

    Facebook does take some of the “out of focus” blame, but I can’t lie and say that it has to take all of it. I completely agree about the wedding. I really don’t like wedding photography and only took that one because it was just the two kids and their immediate families and it was on campus. I have considered taking that album down, but then decided that keeping it up might scare others away from asking me to do theirs. If I ever get more comfortable with the idea of wedding photography, I’ll probably delete the album.

    I have heard about monitor calibration, but I just can’t afford to spend money on it right now. Hopefully sometime in the future.

     

     

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