My question is basically the title itself, but if I have to give more context, I’d say:
I really love raw/natural pictures: smiles, persons, laughs, lights, landscapes, scenes… And sometimes I can capture these moments but sometimes I miss my shot and want to “redo” it when I take a picture of someone. The thing is, once I ask them if I can take a picture of them, their body just, just does not act as natural. Some people (including me) do not know what to do with their body in front of a camera, so they often just stand up straight. I figured out something (maybe) that kinda works: I make them laugh or I ask them to do somthing that requires more movement, like jumping, but you can guess that I’m not always funny or I do not always have something to say, or I do not always want my subject to jump.
So please I’d really like some advices/tips/help
That’s a really good advice! Thank you I’ll write that down.
But do you have tips for portraits with only one person?
The “Whatever you do don’t laugh” trick can work on a single person in my experience. Again, start off by telling them to do a serious face first. You also gotta draw it out a bit when you’re telling them not to laugh, but say it in kind of an exaggerated way that’ll be more likely to cause them to break.
Oh ok, I’ll try that
I do a lot of senior portraits, and it actually really helps when a parent and/or friend is there! I require a parent’s presence for minors anyway, but it’s always been an extra bonus that the parent is someone they’re familiar and comfortable with. I rely on mom/dad jokes to kind of break the ice, and then I encourage interaction with me/the camera, actual movement into a pose instead of a frozen pose, and I try to be as silly as possible to get some laughs.