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Simon Blackley, images of people

Portrait and event photography
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    • Personal portraits
    • Private events
    • World of work
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    • Children
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A good portrait should be astonishing

March 18, 2024 in portrait photography

In a studio portrait session of one hour, it is relatively easy to get my subject sufficiently relaxed to make great portraits. Doing so when I am only with them for two or three minutes is much more challenging.

I regularly do ‘headshot’ sessions for corporate clients, where I spend half a day photographing the entire staff team, one after the other. And for the third year in a row the Business Club VUB recently asked me to attend its annual Job Fair to make headshots of attendees for thir CVs and their LinkedIn profiles.

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At the Job Fair, I shot 56 people in approximately three hours – an average around three minutes per person. But there were some gaps, too, so I suppose I actually spent closer to two minutes with each subject. And my method – apart from the lighting set-up and the camera settings – was essentially a highly compressed version of the way I organise a full studio session:

  • I told each person my first name, and asked them for theirs.

  • I offered my hand to be shaken, and looked at them directly.

  • In the busy Job Fair, I tried to create a feeling of privacy and intimacy in my pop-up studio.

  • I chatted as I took pictures, encouraging my subjects to relax and to move gently in front of the camera.

  • I guided them gently into easy poses – “Bring your other shoulder towards me.” “Lower your chin slightly.”

  • I showed them the portraits I’d made, and offered to make more if they wanted.

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What struck me forcibly was the strength of my subjects’ reactions when they saw the portraits I’d made. As members of a generation that needs no excuse to take selfies at every moment, most of them seemed to recognise that I had managed to achieve something different. They were delighted and amazed.

Tags: headshot, relaxation
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