Re: First portrait session

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Sounds like a lot of fun you had!

As far as too sharp on the lens, you might consider adding noise/grain
to help cover the sharpness.

You could also do a gaussian blur in a slight amount over the entire
image to see what that gets you. If you select a portion of the face, be
certain to feather your selection so it blends to the surrounding area.

Any way you can post some images to the web so we can see what you got?
Lea

----- Original Message -----
From: "Gregory Fraser" <Gregory.Fraser@pwgsc.gc.ca>
To: "List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students"
<photoforum@listserver.isc.rit.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2003 10:58 AM
Subject: First portrait session


> I shot my first non-family portrait session on the weekend. The model
is a friend of mine and hopefully she'll still be a friend after I show
her the prints. The session started off great. I entered her house and
she told me to let her dog sniff me. Somehow I thought that meant let
her sniff my hand like every one of the other million dogs I've met but
no, this dog is a little different. Apparently she's offended by human
hands and the little bitch clamped down on me then took off so fast I
never saw it coming. Live and learn.
>
> Anyway, the only lens I have greater than 50mm is a Tamron 80-200
zoom. I wasn't expecting much from it but it was the only thing I have
close to a portrait lens. The worst part of the shots is not the poor
lighting and its not the fact that in over half the shots at least one
eye is closed and its not the fact that I know squat about directing
models and my friend has never modeled before. The worst part is that
damn Tamron lens is too sharp! I was worried it would be blurry but it
shows every single pore on her face.
>
> So now I'm wondering how to get rid of that in Photoshop. Do I  select
a large area of skin like an entire cheek and perform a gaussian blur?
Should I work in small patches or as large as I can get? Is blurring not
the way to go at all?
>
> Greg Fraser
>
>
>


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