Random Thoughts on Travel Portraits 2024Where in the world are you going next? Like the Sears catalog “Wish Books” of the 1950s, folk peruse travel adventure sites, ’50 must see places before you die’, bucket list travel, ‘best use of your travel miles/points’, ‘top ten wildlife experiences in the world’, and google has got you covered with a million more search results. I just got back from a quick trip south to the great state of Florida to do my AOW (Advanced Open Water) Dive Course, Yay! So glad to have that under my belt. It wasn't the kind of trip I think about a 'travel portrait', but every other kind of trip is. And even though most of my wildlife travel is solo, I meet folk, perhaps in a safari camp, on a ship, or if the trip requires being part of a group for a time. Conversation turns to Pictures, and I often do portraits, which I will send to them once I'm home. It's always a good time engaging in this way with new friends. My guess is that, as a portrait photographer, I think a bit differently about my “I was here” snapshots than many travelers. Not that I, too, wouldn’t be tempted to hold up the Leaning Tower of Pisa, or kiss the Great Sphinx of Giza (Update: I was, incidentally, at the pyramids and did not smooch the Sphinx). But I also like to think about something a bit artsier or more akin to Location Portraiture. I consider clothing, lighting, pose, location, and how I will get the photo, i.e. am I using a tripod, camera timer, or person to click the shutter, and setting the camera correctly with regard to exposure and focus (so that I’m in focus and not the trees or penguins behind me). A lot of the travel portraits are still quite casual, though I feel they raise the bar a bit from simply standing under the giant ‘South of the Border’ Pedro guy (good times, haha!). The various aspects of making good travel portraits require more than a ‘random thoughts’ post, obviously, but just to get you thinking before your next trip, I give you a few examples from my past travels and how I thought about how I would photojournal my trip to share with family, and in particular, my grandchildren, and hopefully inspire them to see the world and the amazing experiences available on this blue marble we call Earth. I knew I would find myself in snow in Antarctica, so I brought this red jacket to stand out in the crowd of cute Gentoo Penguins. I had a tripod with me, so I set the camera up and took turns with my travel mates (Adventures for Solo Travelers) making portraits, which I sent to them after the trip.
The familiar mountainscape of the Grand Tetons in Wyoming and this fence set the stage for a fabulous example of composition, leading lines, foreground interest, and the side lighting which brought out textures. Camera is on tripod, I made all the settings, even focus, and my friend pushed the shutter button.
I was traveling for a week with a small crew of photographers, and had this nitegown with me. Brought it along when we visited Tintern Abbey in Wales, changed in one of the many nooks in the abbey and the other photographers helped me get this classic portrait.
The hills of Tuscany, Italy, so perfect for chilling, repose, and the outfit? I found in a street market in Venice.
Here again, this experience must have some cool shots – I'm also a wildlife photographer, and holding this wedge-tailed eagle on Kangaroo Island, Australia, was a real treat! I set the exposure and most important, the focus points so that I was pretty confident my friend would get good focus on me and Tilka, NOT on the woods in the background. Clothing – Australian-made Akubra hat and typical safari clothing colors that I most often wear on safari and general wildlife travel.
Canon 5D MarkIII, 500mm lens, Tilley hat, Columbia shirt and pants in safari colors, Range Rover, Masai Mara, Kenya – hand my other Canon to my guide with proper settings, have to have this shot during a breakfast break on the Mara, between lion sightings, and way more!
Visiting one of the last farms in Norway that hand-produce gjetost, and the goats that give the milk for that cheese, and since I am 100% Norwegian and most of my family lives in Norway – well, had to capture the moment in a scene rather than a closer-up photo. I purchased the umber-colored knickers outfit on that trip in Norway.
Aboard the MV Fram, an ice breaker ship in Antarctica, had my tripod, am mostly a solo traveler, so resort to camera timer occasionally for portraits, and focus on spot where I'm standing. Lime green thermal, black fleece vest, black cozy pants – I generally stick with solids for travel, easy mix and match for less to pack in consideration of camera gear.
Grand Tetons in Wyoming – fence on an angle – leading line, rule of thirds, foreground, midground, background, boom.
Then again, when you're traveling with someone who knows how to handle a camera, as in this case with my daughter, make sure you get those fun and slightly unusual shots. A blue-footed booby poses for my daughter in the Galapagos, and she moves her camera over a skitch to capture me on the other side.
North of the Arctic Circle in the Lofoten Islands, a wonderful hike ends at this gorgeous beach called Bunes. Sand is a natural canvas for noting that we were there = ).
Keywords:
antarctica,
grand tetons,
masai mara,
norway farm,
see the world,
self portraits,
solo traveler,
tintern abbey,
travel portraits,
tuscany,
wedge-tailed eagle,
wildlife photographer
Comments
No comments posted.
Loading...
|