Most portrait photographers know how to use their camera. Far fewer know how to direct and pose their subjects to create great images.
You can nail the light, dial in the settings, and still walk away with shots that don't work. Nine times out of ten, the problem isn't technical; it's the pose. An awkward hand. A shoulder that juts out. An expression that looks stiff instead of natural. These are fixable problems, and this photography posing guide teaches you how to fix them.
The Photographer's Guide to Posing by Lindsay Adler--one of the world's top fashion and portrait photographers and a sought-after photography educator--is the most comprehensive posing reference available for portrait photographers. It covers not just what to do, but why it works, so you can adapt in real time rather than memorizing poses that may not suit your subject.
What makes this portrait photography book different? Most posing books hand you a catalog of poses to copy. This one teaches you the underlying system. The opening section covers something most posing guides skip entirely: how your camera affects the pose. Lens choice, camera angle, and perspective all change how the body reads in a photograph--and understanding this gives you tools that work no matter who's in front of your lens.
What's inside:
This book is not for photographers looking for a basic pose-by-pose lookup book without the underlying principles (this teaches the system, not just the moves).
This book is for you if:
The Photographer's Guide to Posing has consistently been a bestseller since its publication because it gives portrait photographers what they need: the knowledge and tools to make every subject look their best.