![]() Greta looking in the direction of the other two. And after I took the photos, I played with the order until the photos felt like a natural fit. I like to crop each child with relative size in mind. ![]() And after just a few minutes clicking the shutter while my mom chatted with each girl–I got it! I photographed each of the girls in front of a mostly blank wall that got good lighting (in the stairwell for the older tow and in a boppy in the entry for the baby.) It’s a good idea to have someone there just carrying on a conversation with them because you’re not trying to catch them looking at the camera giving me their best cheese–you’re trying to capture their natural personalities. This time around, I followed the exact same method. You can read exactly how I recommend editing the photos in the original post right here. How does that quote go? The best thing about photographs is they don’t change even when the people inside of them do. And now that all three are up, I don’t see myself updating the photos again. Ha!īut! One of my favorite things about this project is portraying the age gap and scale of each child. One of our readers suggested just taking a new photo of Faye and no one would even know. In fact, it kind of could just be Polly, really. I knew it was time to add Polly to the wall when I realized she was about the same age as Faye when I photographed her just over 3 years ago. ![]() Because they grew up and now, there are three. The project has been shared and duplicated hundreds of thousands of times and today, I thought I’d share a little update. Over three years ago, I photographed our, then, two little girls in a simple and modern way, and blew them up as engineering prints and the result took the internet by storm. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |