bcla
On our rugged Eastern foothills.....
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2012
- Messages
- 25,711
I was trying to take a photo of my kid last weekend. I use one of those online services that generates a sheet to print to a 4x6" print. Still - I've typically had issues with them - especially shadows which the State Dept says may not be acceptable if they make it hard to tell where the outline of the head is. I've always had a bit of shadow, but I haven't had a photo rejected yet.
I've never tried taking a passport photo outside before but found an off-white wall somewhere and it turned out pretty well. It was actually this granite plaque, but with the back was an off-white stucco. It was just using an iPhone, but the result was still pretty good. I did use the flash (thought it might help reduce shadows), but I don't think it did much. Before I generated the sheet, I copied the photo file and used a simple white balance adjustment similar to what would be generated inside of a digital camera or smartphone. I don't think that necessarily counts as "retouching", but without it the photo was a bit on the dark side. I'm not sure if I could get my kid to reproduce that pose; my kid kept on making faces after that more or less ideal shot.
This is a far cry from when I remember going to a shop with a photo lab where they used a specific system from Polaroid that generated exactly two photos taken simultaneously. And these days the State Dept only needs one photo.
So what do you guys do? I know going to Walgreens, Costco, etc. may be easier. I uploaded my prints to Target and they have a $12.99 service that supposedly generates 4 passport photos. I think that's where you upload the photo and they've got an editing system to properly align the head for the State Dept's requirements. I just hope they're not like some other places that I've heard have rejected anything that looks like DIY passport photo. I've heard claims that Walgreens will reject it, although in the past I've gotten various DIY passport/visa photos done through Target, Costco, or CVS (when they still had a real photo lab) with no problem. I've even done USCIS photos for a friend (they've changed their requirement to passport style) and those turned out pretty well.
I've never tried taking a passport photo outside before but found an off-white wall somewhere and it turned out pretty well. It was actually this granite plaque, but with the back was an off-white stucco. It was just using an iPhone, but the result was still pretty good. I did use the flash (thought it might help reduce shadows), but I don't think it did much. Before I generated the sheet, I copied the photo file and used a simple white balance adjustment similar to what would be generated inside of a digital camera or smartphone. I don't think that necessarily counts as "retouching", but without it the photo was a bit on the dark side. I'm not sure if I could get my kid to reproduce that pose; my kid kept on making faces after that more or less ideal shot.
This is a far cry from when I remember going to a shop with a photo lab where they used a specific system from Polaroid that generated exactly two photos taken simultaneously. And these days the State Dept only needs one photo.
So what do you guys do? I know going to Walgreens, Costco, etc. may be easier. I uploaded my prints to Target and they have a $12.99 service that supposedly generates 4 passport photos. I think that's where you upload the photo and they've got an editing system to properly align the head for the State Dept's requirements. I just hope they're not like some other places that I've heard have rejected anything that looks like DIY passport photo. I've heard claims that Walgreens will reject it, although in the past I've gotten various DIY passport/visa photos done through Target, Costco, or CVS (when they still had a real photo lab) with no problem. I've even done USCIS photos for a friend (they've changed their requirement to passport style) and those turned out pretty well.