Julianne Jonker Senior Portrait Posing Guide

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Julianne Jonker Senior Portrait Posing Guide

#2 Always save your best poses for the middle or end of a shoot. This gives your model time to warmup and feel more comfortable trying more close up shots! Service manual zebra 105 sl. Without fail I always tell them to save their favorite outfit for the final wardrobe change for last as well.

At the end they are comfortable, having fun and feeling beautiful which truly shines through their final imageshence they love those shots and poses more than their first outfit and poses. Not that they don’t love the first of the session but they are typically head over heels for the last portion of their senior session.

#4 I had Maribeth lean back against the barn and relax. She had her hands in her pockets which caused her elbow to reach further back onto the wood separating them from her body. We sat there for about five minutes and she was looking at the tree in front of us. I said, “Look over here.” And SNAP there’s the look. Ashley Nicole Photography #5 The best way to get a real smile is to give constant positive feedback. Continue talking to your senior to make them more comfortable. They will relax and you will be able to capture a genuine smile.

Once you set down your camera is when you get the genuine real smileso the moral of the story is don’t set your camera down! When they think you are finished snap again! #12 I love this pose because it is so flattering. It pulls the arms away from the body to slim them, and pulls the face up and out to elongate the neck. From this angle, the entire body is slightly de-emphasized, even though most of it is visible.

And at the same time, it feels natural and youthful, like a senior portrait should, without being too childlike or stiff or awkward. With this pose, be attentive to how you are shooting your subject’s legs, since it will not be flattering to that part of her body. #21No fancy lenses? You can use a kit lens to shoot gorgeous senior shots – just use tricks to make it look as gorgeous as a prime image. Shooting in a field of tall grass allows you to get some of the grass directly in front of you and far behind you out of focus, giving the impression of beautiful depth of field where it doesn’t actually exist. This was my very first senior session, shot with an 18-55 Nikon kit lens. #22 Sepia seemed cliche and out, but new techniques make it look gorgeous!

Senior

Try using radial gradient layers and gradient maps to create the tones in Photoshop, rather than using the black and white tool. A gradient layer set to Soft Light at 60%, Reverse, Align with Layer, scaled to 150%, and then the color changed to a dark, almost black red, will add a nice soft vignette to the image without overpowering it. Then add a gradient map (reverse if needed so it is black and white and not an inverted image), and set the tone to a dark, almost black brown-orange hue. Copy that gradient map layer, set it to Soft Light and change the opacity to around 40% to richen the tones.

Julianne Jonker Senior Portrait Posing Guide

Julianne jonker senior portrait posing guidelines

Open up the map and adjust it to a lighter orange color until you achieve a color you like. You’ll get a beautiful sepia image with copper tones that are just gorgeous, rather than an ugly golden image. You might also like: Follow me at: Hi! I’m Erin, a Southern mama from South Mississippi, owner and chief editor of a blog helping mom-tographers capture their kiddos and life, talking all things home, parenting and how we navigate through life. You will find me living life to the fullest with my mister (aka husband) and our little two year old, Miss E, in our 500+ sq foot cottage as we build our dream house on our two acres! We are blessed beyond measure, love to travel, involved in ministry at our church and in between all of that we run two successful businesses together!

Julianne Jonker Photography

The senior portrait posing guide is a compilation of 100 images created by Master Photographer and artist JuliAnne Jonker. The guide is printed on thick UV coated card stock to endure the wear and tear of carrying it around on location.

The spiral makes it very convenient to flip through during a session. The guide shows you the lighting she is well known for, as well as 100 different ideas in lighting and posing high school seniors to create natural and timeless portraits. Each page includes step by step instructions for posing. You can read this text directly to the subject to guide them into the pose.