Showing posts with label location portraits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label location portraits. Show all posts

Black and White or Colour?

While many people prefer a classic black and white look for an heirloom portrait, the answer to the question of whether to pick black and white or colour for your portrait is a simple one. It all depends which you like better!

Either way you'll get a print of museum archive quality. And of course you always get to look at a series of proofs before settling on a final choice. The proofs will show a selection of both colour and black and white images so the choice will be that much easier if you're at all undecided.

Split screen portraits of two young Toronto girls, one in color and one in black and white

What's An Environmental Portrait?

When you hear that a photographer offers or specializes in 'environmental portraits' you might understandably think of something like what you see below:

A pile of garbage.
But that's not what an environmental portrait is! It really just means the portrait's done in a real location or with realistic surroundings like what you see here:

Portrait of young Toronto girl holding flowersA 'studio portrait' on the other hand is more like what you used to get each year at school: a shot of you just sitting there in front of a simple background. There's nothing wrong with this sort of approach but environmental portraits provide an opportunity to capture an aspect of a person's character that you wouldn't see with a plain old studio background.

Also: most people aren't models or actors, they aren't always at ease in front of a camera. Taking a portrait in a real setting while the subject is actually doing something let's them be more relaxed and natural, and that can make all the difference in the world between a dull portrait and a great one.