The World of Art

Find Your Piece of Art

Art Portrait

without comments

Thanks for visiting our site The World of Art! We hope you will find clear information about Art Portrait. Feel free to browse our website. When you do not find the information immediately, you can also use the search feature on our site. We provide you with articles, pictures, youtube movies, .... . Push the contact button when you have a question.

Check Amazon for Art Portrait products.


3pk Cut-Able Photo Magnets 4x6 3pk Cut-Able Photo Magnets 4x6" Customize Self-Adhesive
List Price: $20.00
Sale Price: $3.99

Build fun craft creations with Cut-able Photo Magnets! These cool photo-holding magnets feature a self-adhesive front on a flexible magnetic back. Simply place a 4" x 6" photo directly on the adhesive front then stick the magnet anywhere you like...

Art Portrait

Art Portrait

Portrait Backgrounds - a Portrait Artist's Perspective

When working from a reference photograph, I rarely reproduce backgrounds. The key reasons are that the backdrop to portrait snaps are usually obtrusive, or completely inappropriate.

For my purposes, the worst possible photograph is one where a dark subject has been photographed against a dark background (commonly shot in low light with a on-camera flash). These make it extremely difficult to isolate the subject from the background.

Keep it simple

The simplest possible background is a painted wall, or a sheet or blanket hung against a wall. Generally, such a background should have a matt surface to prevent reflections (especially when using fill-in flash).

Try to avoid colour clashes with the subject and their clothing. Hot colours (reds, oranges) advance and are best avoided, while cool colours (greens, blues) recede and help the subject stand-out. Also try to avoid tonal clashes such as a pale subject against a very dark background, or a dark subject against a very light backdrop. It is highly likely that your camera meter will not cope well with such extremes.

Don't use backgrounds with horizontal and/or vertical lines. A brick wall, for example, makes a particularly bad background due to the severe horizontal and vertical lines, plus the red colour of brick is too warm and clashes with most skin colours.

The overall aim should be to minimize the competition for attention between the subject and the background.

De clutter

If you are unable to find a suitably plain backdrop (or decide not use one for other reasons), move any unnecessary clutter from the background. Reflective objects in particular are best removed out of shot (e.g. mirrors, pictures under glass).

If possible, use a large aperture setting to put the background out of focus. This has the added benefit of making the subject stand out sharply. The further away the background is, the darker and the more out of focus it will appear.

When outdoors, don't shoot against hedges as a backdrop. They are usually too dark, and tend to leak light producing a speckled effect. Trees do not make good backdrops either, and branches have a habit of appearing as though they are sticking out of heads.

Horizons

If there is a horizon in the background, try to keep it either low or high to avoid dividing the picture in half. Careless positioning can cause undesirable juxtapositions, such as hedges appearing to go into the subjects's ear and out the other.

Appropriateness

An appropriate background is something that reflects the character of the subject. Returning to our brick wall; if the subject is a Brick Layer, and in work clothes, then a brick wall might become a suitable backdrop?

Portraits by John Burton

About the Author

Portrait artist working mainly from clients' own photographs.

Sawyer (Josh Holloway) Lost portrait art speed drawing theportraitart

->Art Portrait.

Check Amazon for Art Portrait products.

So far my information about Art Portrait.

Thanks for visiting!

Leave a Reply