Portrait photography

Try also to use the Photopass photographers. They will also take photos with your camera. I have a link to pre-order the Photopas CD for $100. You can then take those photos and add borders, autographs. PM if you want the link. I'm not sure if I can post it.

Look for where the photopass photographers are around the park icons. In MK there is usually one in the Rose Garden on your way into Tomorrow Land, in front of the Castle by the partners statue. In AK on the Tree of Life Garden path you can get the Tree in the background. We also found a nice spot when you come off Kilamanjaro Safari by the waterfall and the gorillas are. Follow the path off the safari and make a right (I think). It has been hit or miss if a Photopass Photog was there.
 
My favorite spot in the Animal Kingdom is to the right of the Tree of Life, on the back side of Discovery River. The sidewalk makes a jog to the left, leaving an area where there is usually a photopass photographer. There is enough room for an entire family with Expedition Everest in the background. Here is a photopass photo from that spot.


image047 by Gianna'sPapa, on Flickr
 

I should add, if your family is comming, they can each get their own photo pass card and you can add all the pictures to a single photo pass account (everyone will need to know the email address and password for that single account) and then you can all put your photos on a single photo cd.
 
I recently did a set of studio sessions for about a dozen families. Most of my work is with young children, but a few of these families had teenagers with the typical skin problems that brings. Because of the volume of pictures I had to process, I decided to check out Portrait Professional to see if it would help.

I have to say that I was rather skeptical. Their ads look cheesy. Most of the pictures I've seen from fans are processed beyond my preference and style. I really didn't have high expectations, but I also didn't relish the choice of presenting my clients with lots of pictures with bad skin and the promise that I'd retouch the ones they wanted or spending an entire weekend processing the same few faces in Photoshop.

I tried a trial version of the software. Fortunately, their trial version is watermark based (it puts an ugly watermark on your pictures) rather than time based because I had installed the trial before and never spent enough time with it to really see if I liked it. Because it was watermark based, I was able to install a new trial without any hassles.

It took me a couple of passes to get the settings to my liking. By default, it makes everyone's skin look, well, not like skin. It took me about 15 minutes to tweak it so that I liked the output from a picture. Once I had that done, I was able to crank through my pictures at a rate of about 2/minute. It has a "batch" mode, but that just means that it auto-loads the next picture.

For each picture, you have to specify whether it is male or female. Then you have to identify the outer edges of the eyes and the tip of the nose. Then you can either let it rip based on that small amount of info or you can fine tune the position and shape of the eyes, lips, nose, and facial edges. For quick proofs, you can usually get away without the fine tuning on most pictures. For actual prints, it's pretty important to take the extra steps.

It does a pretty good job overall. It was great for eliminating acne. It's still far from perfect. It lets you touch up a lot of stuff, but it has odd omissions like no control over teeth whitening and brightening, which is pretty key to most photos. I was also never able to get the eyes quite the way I wanted them. They were always a little lacking in contrast, having lost most of the darker tones outside of the pupil itself.

It definitely appears to like clean, hi-res images. The shots I took at f/8 to f/11 worked much better than those taken at f/2.8. I turned the slider for smoothing pores all the way down. Having that light skin texture helped preserve the illusion that the photo wasn't heavily retouched. The pores were much less obvious in my wide open shots, so that trick didn't work and, consequently, it was harder to avoid that overly smooth processed look.

So is it worth it? That depends. If you don't take many portraits, obviously not. If you do, it is worth it if you have to process high volumes or if you don't know or don't care to know how to do good touch up in Photoshop. It'll do 80% of the job for you with almost no effort.

I wish I had some before and after examples to show you. I don't have permission for any of the teens I shot for something like that and I'd hate to have them stumble on their photos as an example of the need for retouching. My boys haven't quite reached that phase yet. Maybe I'll do a self portrait later so you can see how it works on the tired and worn phase of a middle age man aged beyond his years. Or if anyone has a high res image they want demo'd, I'd be happy to oblige.
 
It does a pretty good job overall. It was great for eliminating acne. It's still far from perfect. It lets you touch up a lot of stuff, but it has odd omissions like no control over teeth whitening and brightening, which is pretty key to most photos. I was also never able to get the eyes quite the way I wanted them. They were always a little lacking in contrast, having lost most of the darker tones outside of the pupil itself.

.

if you scroll down to the mouth and nose controls, there are sliders for whitening and brightening teeth
 
My greatest area of discomfort when using it is that it seems to flatten the colour of the face; people look as if they've got foundation on - not always of an appropriate colour - and have no highlights or shadows.

Used in moderation, it can be very helpful, but it's easy to get things very wrong.

As for speed, I was more like 5 minutes per picture

regards,
/alan
 
Does it have a setting to make you look thinner? If so, sign me up!
 
I haven't used Portrait Professional, but when I'm doing skin edits, I will reduce the opactity of the edited layer to let some of the natural shadows and highlights back in. Even though it adds an extra step, I'd probably do the same process if I used software like PP. Sometimes, a pass through Noiseware (I think that the same company as PP) is enough to clear up mild skin issues.
 


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom