|
By Margaret Miller, Photographer
As a parent,
I loved taking pictures of our daughter and son as they were growing up. Capturing
a posed portrait or an on-the-run candid can be extraordinarily rewarding. Actually,
it's quite easy to take very good pictures of your kids. Here are a few simple
concepts that will improve your pictures dramatically.
Use Your
Eyes
To take pleasing
photographs, whether you're using a simple point-and-shoot or an expensive, bells-and-whistles
camera, you must use your eyes. You must see through the viewfinder. Look, look,
and look again. Your camera is merely a tool for taking a picture. Photography
is not a passive undertaking. You must claim the role of visual boss. Nothing
- no camera, however sophisticated - is a replacement for your eyes, your vision.
Use Your
Feet
One of the
best ways to improve your photos is to use your feet and to move in close. You
want your child to be the dominating star in your picture. You want their face,
their body, to fill the frame. (Keep in mind, that every auto focus camera will
tell you if you're too close to your subject to focus.)
|
© 2000 FRIENDS |
First, pick
up your camera and look through the viewfinder. Does your child look insignificant
and lost in the scene? If the answer is yes, you can move in closer, or you can
move to the left, or you can move to the right. You may even decide to move your
child to improve the composition. Using your camera's viewfinder, be the visual
editor until your child's image fills that small rectangle, and you have chosen
a point of view that crops out the surrounding extraneous odds and ends. You can
make all of these visual decisions very quickly, even in a few seconds.
It sounds
rather absurd to emphasize the fact that you can see through your camera, and
that you can move your feet to create your image. But time and time again, I see
people lift up the camera, point it vaguely in the direction of their subject,
and press the shutter. It's as if the camera is a barrier to making decisions,
rather than a tool that you control. Don't be shy about taking control of your
camera. The improved quality of the photographs of your kids will astound you.
Plan Ahead
|
© 2000 FRIENDS
|
Planning ahead
is especially important for a posed portrait. Before you even pick up your camera,
think about the best location for your photo. Choose a spot with a simple background
that won't distract visually from your child's face. Choose simple clothes, and
a time of day when everyone is in a good mood. In general, avoid taking photographs
in the middle of a sunny day. The overhead sunlight is harsh, and casts strong
shadows.
Be Playful and Patient
Next to "using
your eyes," being playful and patient are probably the hardest goals in taking
photographs of your children. We all know as parents that demanding a smile practically
guarantees failure. You have to make the picture-taking process fun, a game. Tell
silly stories; play-rhyming games based on words that sounds like cheese; tickle
the toes. And remember not every photo needs a smile. A serious expression can
also be wonderful.
And if you've
really tried, and nothing is working, and you're running out of patience, STOP.
Put away the camera and try again tomorrow.
Shoot lots
of Pictures
Shoot at least
one roll of 24 to 36 images if you're looking for a really good image. Often it
takes a roll to get in rhythm with your child; to establish rapport. Sometimes
you'll hit a great streak in the middle of the roll when your child responds with
glorious smiles, and then the mood vanishes for the remaining images
|
© 2000
FRIENDS
|
Enjoy
Enjoy the
fact that you're documenting your child's life. As the years pass by and you look
at your collected photos, I can guarantee that you will always rejoice in the
images and never regret the time, effort and money, because you will have captured
on film wonderful moments that are gone forever.
This "how
to" sheet has been provided by Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing and can
be reprinted for publication either in full or excerpted as individual "tips,"
so long as they are reprinted in their entirety.
Photographs
from FRIENDS
Written by Elaine Scott, photographs by Margaret Miller
Copyright 2000
All rights reserved
[ Check
Out Our Message
Boards |
Back to Experts' Advice | Ask
A Question ]
|