A nice shot. A little over exposed.
L-series portrait lens 17-40
Toppermom wrote:
I photographed this little one for his portfolio yesterday. Comments, please :)
Perfect and he is a doll. I would have guessed 3
I think this is very very good. What a cute little guy.
I seem to always want to know what lens and camera you used.
Please share.
lindann wrote:
I think this is very very good. What a cute little guy.
I seem to always want to know what lens and camera you used.
Please share.
Canon 7D 17-40 L-series lens 580EXII flash
Thank you :)
He is adorable..
I am not a professional photographer. I will tell as a mom what I do and don't like
Love the little hand in the picture (given that-- my guess would be 2-3 years)
don't like-- his head so far forward makes him look kinda bobble head on his shoulders. As I wasn't there I an not sure how to position him to change that.
I think you captured a great look-- little ones are a oain even though they are cute.
Very nice portrait. The only thing I would change is the vignette. To me i is distracting
Toppermom wrote:
I photographed this little one for his portfolio yesterday. Comments, please :)
Perfect...love the hair and everything else about this portrait.
This is a wonderful shot of a very handsome little guy, but I sure would be sad if he were my two year old and looked so grown up.
You captured the soul of this young lad in his eyes and created a portrait of him that should stand for generations to come.
Excellent shot, eyes looking straight into the camera......
I'm using acdsee pro 5 good program..
great shot
try an effect of adding color to only the eyes ?
(might be fun)
ken
pebble70 wrote:
I'm using acdsee pro 5 good program..
great shot
try an effect of adding color to only the eyes ?
(might be fun)
ken
I have done that with other children's photos, it can be fun :)
Toppermom wrote:
I photographed this little one for his portfolio yesterday. Comments, please :)
It's excellent as is. I might just hit it with a bit of sharpening to add crispness. I think that might make the hair "pop" a little more.
This photograph is the exception that proves the rules about placing the portrait's subject's eyes on the top thirds line for composition and having the subject look into the photograph. Marvelous photograph! You can almost see what mischievousness he is conjuring up.
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