Design Portrait Session
Plan and execute a portrait session with clear client communication, intentional lighting, effective posing direction, and a systematic shooting workflow to produce technically and emotionally compelling portraits.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: PPA Certified Professional Photographers standard, WPPI International Print Competition criteria, Annie Leibovitz studio preparation methodology
Impact: Pre-planned sessions reduce post-production time by 40% (PPA workflow studies); systematic posing direction increases client satisfaction scores by 60% vs. unguided sessions (WPPI member surveys)
Why best: Adler's "Art of Seeing" framework shows that great portraits result from intentional technical choices (lighting ratio, lens focal length, depth of field) combined with authentic subject connection — neither alone is sufficient.
Sources: Adler "The Art of Seeing" (2015); PPA "Professional Portrait Photography Standards"; WPPI "Portrait Competition Judging Criteria"
Steps
- Conduct pre-session consultation — discuss client goals (personal branding, family, headshot), preferred style (editorial, natural, dramatic), intended use (print size, web, social), wardrobe recommendations, and location/studio preference.
- Scout and select location — evaluate: available light quality and direction at planned shoot time, backgrounds and depth options, permit requirements (for private/public spaces), backup for weather.
- Plan the lighting approach — select based on mood: Rembrandt (loop shadow, 45° off-axis) for drama; flat front-light for beauty/commercial; window light for natural editorial; ring light for digital/social headshots.
- Prepare equipment checklist — camera body + backup, lenses (85mm–135mm prime for flattering portrait compression), light modifiers (softbox, reflector, diffuser), batteries, cards, posing stool if studio.
- Create a shot list — plan 5–8 distinct setups: vary background, lighting ratio, focal length, and subject mood; allocate 10–15 min per setup; this prevents shooting the same frame 100 times.
- Direct the subject into the session — start with easy, low-pressure poses to build comfort; avoid posing terms ("chin forward and down") without demonstrating; use emotional direction ("think about someone who makes you laugh") for natural expressions.
- Apply 7 posing principles — weight on back foot (slims silhouette), angle body 30–45° to camera (not squared), hands engaged not limp, chin forward and slightly down (defines jaw), eyes on a specific point (not "just look at camera"), avoid merging limbs with torso, create space between arms and body.
- Monitor light and exposure — use histogram to avoid clipping highlights; shoot at 1–2 stops above sync speed for flash; verify catchlights appear in eyes for every setup change.
- Tether or review on camera — show subject 1–2 favorites per setup to build confidence and course-correct posing issues; tethered shooting allows real-time review on laptop.
- Cull on shoot day — during breaks, eliminate technical failures (out of focus, eyes closed, severe motion blur); deliver only selects — over-delivering weak images degrades perceived quality.
Rules
- Lens focal length must be appropriate for portrait compression — wide angle below 35mm distorts facial features; 85–135mm is the flattering range for head-and-shoulders.
- Eyes must be sharp — autofocus point should be on the near eye; no other sharpness compromise is acceptable in portraiture.
- Subject comfort drives expression — a technically perfect image of an uncomfortable subject produces an unusable portrait.
- All light sources must produce a catchlight in the eye — an eye with no catchlight appears lifeless.
- Never deliver images below the standard you would enter in competition — clients retain images forever; quality over quantity.
Common Mistakes
- No pre-session consultation — mismatched style expectations cannot be corrected in post; define the look before the session.
- Squaring subject to camera — shoulders parallel to camera is the least flattering angle for most subjects; always angle the body.
- Hands limp at sides — hands are a major composition element; engage them (holding something, on hip, in pocket with thumb out).
- Too much choice delivered — delivering 300 images instead of 80 selects forces clients to do your editing job; curate aggressively.
- Ignoring background — a cluttered or distracting background cannot be fixed in post; check the frame edges before every setup.
When NOT to Use
- Documentary-style candid portraiture where posing undermines authenticity
- Street photography contexts
- Wildlife or action photography requiring spontaneous capture