Good photographers know not to position their model in such a way to "cut off her legs". However... in this case, it lends to thoughts of a sinking nature.
http://cdn.pornpics.com/pics/2015-07-14 ... _12big.jpg
Leanne Crow in beach quicksand... would be very nice. She has done work with Rockelle Starbux... and I've been hoping...
Meh, enjoy.
Photographer fail is our gain...
- jadokast98
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- tanya_wam
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
Oh tosh! Tanya retorted, quicksand churning,
Round her knees, then thighs, then oh dear!
It got intimate with her hips and her panties,
And squished rather funnily up her rear!
Round her knees, then thighs, then oh dear!
It got intimate with her hips and her panties,
And squished rather funnily up her rear!
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
Works for me!
Its all about peace and love and good happiness stuff
- MadMax359
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
i agree, we ought to hire her for a session or 3
The strong do what they want, the weak do what they must
- BogDog
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
jadokast98 wrote:Good photographers know not to position their model in such a way to "cut off her legs".
How I wish...I can't tel you how many photo shoots I have been disappointed by due to the photographer
"amputating" the models legs at mid-thigh in practically every pic, via to-close framing or post-shoot cropping. I call such photographers "Torso-shooters".
As far as babes on the beach, I often look for photos like that. A smile can ruin the effect too, so a good distressed or worried look always helps.
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"Life is tough. It's tougher if you're stupid." - John Wayne
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- Producer
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
Not everyone with a camera is a photographer. I can't say I'll all that good at it either but I can at least recognize some of the traps that men with cameras fall into. One is forgetting what they are really there for. At a video shoot, for example, its quite common for a still photographer to seem to forget they are taking stills. They might bang away with six shots in two seconds at a critical moment in the scene, such as a submergence. The result is six nearly identical shots and a major sound-editing problem for the video editor. The fast repetition feature of high end still cameras has its place but the video camera will get more images and from a better angle.
Some photographers also get overly focused on what they find most interesting in the viewfinder. Legs might get cut off, as described in the originalk post here because the photographer is looking at something else rather than the overall composition. For storytelling, of course, THAT is what is important and some sacrifice of artistic composition may be necessary.
A mistake I made when I first got into photography (half a century ago and then some) was to become an equipment hound. I had some much gear I spent most of my time hauling it around and fiddling with it instead of getting good pictures. There is a funny, and almost certainly true, story of the photographer who spent so much time fiddling with the flash device he was going to use that Abraham Lincoln finish his Gettysburg address before the photographer was ready, and the shot was missed. [And while I may be old, I'm not THAT old.]
Trying to get everything in is another mistake, perhaps the opposite of getting too close and cutting off the subject's legs. Imagine trying to get a group portrait of the entire staff of a sports arena or the entire student body of a major university. It could be done but no one would be recognizable.
Some photographers also get overly focused on what they find most interesting in the viewfinder. Legs might get cut off, as described in the originalk post here because the photographer is looking at something else rather than the overall composition. For storytelling, of course, THAT is what is important and some sacrifice of artistic composition may be necessary.
A mistake I made when I first got into photography (half a century ago and then some) was to become an equipment hound. I had some much gear I spent most of my time hauling it around and fiddling with it instead of getting good pictures. There is a funny, and almost certainly true, story of the photographer who spent so much time fiddling with the flash device he was going to use that Abraham Lincoln finish his Gettysburg address before the photographer was ready, and the shot was missed. [And while I may be old, I'm not THAT old.]
Trying to get everything in is another mistake, perhaps the opposite of getting too close and cutting off the subject's legs. Imagine trying to get a group portrait of the entire staff of a sports arena or the entire student body of a major university. It could be done but no one would be recognizable.
Studio 588 currently offers more than 2200 different HD and QD quicksand videos and has supported production of well over 2400 video scenes and other projects by 13 different producers. Info may be found at:
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http://studio588qs.com
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- jadokast98
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
Fred588 wrote:Everything .
I had recalled Peter Gowland's book on photography about the subject of this and he'd had intentionally had done a shot with the models legs facing away from him to demonstrate what he was describing. I had the book to assist me in me classes when I was in high school back in 82. I knew what I liked prior to that and whether he was trying to prevent I would have loved to achieve. lol.
One of my classmates had even agreed to pose for this series of sinking photos. A huge "but" was the temperature in October here in central New York were less than conducive. Class ended in January and we never finished the project. We graduated that June and she married a week after that. Real life interfered in so many ways.
In my original post... it is quite obvious what the photographer's main points of interest is and I don't blame him at all. What I see in our producers here on this site is better that what I've seen elsewhere. One of the annoying things with big busty models is that the lens they use makes the breast and the remainder of the model appear out of scale. Some viewers like that I guess.
- MadMax359
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Re: Photographer fail is our gain...
BogDog wrote:jadokast98 wrote:Good photographers know not to position their model in such a way to "cut off her legs".
How I wish...I can't tel you how many photo shoots I have been disappointed by due to the photographer
"amputating" the models legs at mid-thigh in practically every pic, via to-close framing or post-shoot cropping. I call such photographers "Torso-shooters".
As far as babes on the beach, I often look for photos like that. A smile can ruin the effect too, so a good distressed or worried look always helps.
and this damsel has the perfect expression!
The strong do what they want, the weak do what they must
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