The Top 5 Boudoir Poses of 2018 AND…How Your Photographer Will Screw Them Up!
Boudoir posing is hard! Take a look at some of my favorite poses of 2018 along with tips on how to choose the best poses for amazing results from your boudoir session. –AND how to keep your photographer from getting it all horribly wrong…
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WOW just slams down all other photographers what's that all about …how do you know other photographers will get this wrong have you never got anything wrong and learnt from it..hopefully women who want a shoot wont look at this tutorial and be put off by other photographers making mistakes..thanks..
you talk about getting 'depth of field' wrong and 'leg position' wrong etc but offer ZERO explanation on how to get it right… so whats the point of this video???
thank you for the advise, the mini 'how your photographer can screw up' was actually pretty helpful for my boudoir – i do my own point and shoots and will def remember some of these.
Your condescending comments about how “your photographer can screw this up”, rather than empowering photographers with solid advice, simply demonstrates your audacity. Is this self-promotion by belittling others? You’re obnoxious.
Total sum of this highly educational video every photographer is screw up execpt me I am a genius.
Interesting perspective- the video speaks to the client and could be potentially undermining true photographers. I mean, as a strict point of a business practice as well as establishing a connection, I speak often to my clients before the actual session. I’m receptive to their suggestions and advance image ideas, but on the day of, I would be hugely disrupted if the client stated – I saw this video and instructs me versus the photographer guiding the client. It’s open dialogue but again, the concern here being the video although educational for clients could be an obstacle.
My poses are usually catering to the clients 1) preference 2) comfort levels, 3) body type 4) comfort 5) my artistic vision leading to a composition I feel my client will appreciate.
This isn’t necessarily a negative comment – just an observation from a photographers point of view.
You mention depth of field a lot, but don't give any pointers on where focus should fall or what should be softened. Love the video though.
Just curious do you need a F/1.4 lens to take those images