November 2019
Beginner to intermediate
208 pages
4h 42m
English

The thing that adds depth and dimension to our portraits (and helps to keep them from looking like flat 2D art) is the shadow on your subject’s face. So, when you’re shooting outdoors, it’s a balancing act because we’re trying to keep our subject out of the direct sunlight (so they’re not squinting and they don’t have hard shadows), but at the same time, we don’t want flat light. We want directional light—light that produces shadows and highlights and gives our subject’s face depth and dimension (like you see above, where we have those nice, soft shadows on his face, camera left, courtesy of the ...
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