Justin Klayh Photography: $99 for a One-Hour On-Location Photo Shoot with Digital Images (Save $201 or 67% Off)

Justin Klayh Photography

Today’s Groupon Winnipeg Daily Deal of the Day: Justin Klayh Photography: $99 for a One-Hour On-Location Photo Shoot with Digital Images (Save $201 or 67% Off)

Buy now for only $
99
Value $300
Discount 67% Off
Save $201

The Groupon Deal

$99 for a one-hour on-location portrait package ($300 total value)

  • One-hour session ($200 value)
  • Sitting fee ($75 value)
  • Digital copies of the images ($25 value)

This is a limited time offer while quantities last so don’t miss out!

Click here to buy now or for more details about the deal.

In a Nutshell
Photographer with a journalistic aesthetic captures candid moments during on-location portrait sessions

The Fine Print
Expires 180 days after purchase. May be repurchased every 90 days. Valid only within 25 miles of zip code R3Y 0J8. Appointment required. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Justin Klayh Photography
http://www.justinklayh.com/

Lighting: The Key to a Good Portrait
To capture you at your best, photographers must work with a fickle apprentice—light. Check out Groupon’s overview of the ways that light makes you look good.

Shadows enveloping your neck. A double chin that shouldn’t be there. Blemishes on the forehead rather than your favorite hat. Every amateur photographer has suffered the ill effects of bad lighting. Professionals, however, understand the virtues of proper lighting in bringing out the best of their subjects, whether within the controlled world of the studio or out amid the unpredictable mercy of the outdoors.

In a studio, photographers employ a set of tools that ensures light only hits their subjects in the most flattering ways. Depending on how the subject and photographer want photos to look, shadows can either mar an otherwise great shot—by emphasizing wrinkles and imperfections—or add drama, texture, and dimension through the highlighted contrast. They can reduce the contrast by using a broad light source, which spreads the rays out over multiple directions, or soften the light with an effect—similar to the way clouds make sunlight less intense—known as diffusion. Photographers may also use multiple synchronized flashes to hit many angles at once, reducing contrast, or light subjects from a specific angle—in general, more texture and detail is visible when the light hits a subject at a greater angle, and longer, more angular shadows can add extraordinary depth to an otherwise two-dimensional portrait.

Obviously, outdoor shoots allow for less control over the light, but some techniques from the studio still work. Collapsible diffusers, for instance, help mitigate direct sunlight, and holding a reflector under the subject’s face can help rid it of any glaring shadows. The most effective tool, however, is often good planning. A photographer may decide to schedule a shoot for a specific time of day to take advantage of more flattering lighting or to ensure they won’t be shooting directly into the sun at a specific location—in which case they’ll have to pay Apollo’s exorbitant royalties.

Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!

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