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Simon Blackley, images of people

Portrait and event photography
  • About / FAQ
  • Contact
  • Galleries
    • Corporate events
    • Corporate headshots
    • Professional portraits
    • Personal portraits
    • Private events
    • World of work
    • Couples
    • Children
    • Performers
    • Behind The Scenes
  • Personal work
    • Street photography
    • Beautiful world
    • Built environment
    • Brussels
    • Runners
    • Tree-human project
  • Blog
  • Privacy policy
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A good portrait should be astonishing

March 18, 2024 in portrait photography

In a studio portrait session of one hour, it is relatively easy to get my subject sufficiently relaxed to make great portraits. Doing so when I am only with them for two or three minutes is much more challenging.

I regularly do ‘headshot’ sessions for corporate clients, where I spend half a day photographing the entire staff team, one after the other. And for the third year in a row the Business Club VUB recently asked me to attend its annual Job Fair to make headshots of attendees for thir CVs and their LinkedIn profiles.

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At the Job Fair, I shot 56 people in approximately three hours – an average around three minutes per person. But there were some gaps, too, so I suppose I actually spent closer to two minutes with each subject. And my method – apart from the lighting set-up and the camera settings – was essentially a highly compressed version of the way I organise a full studio session:

  • I told each person my first name, and asked them for theirs.

  • I offered my hand to be shaken, and looked at them directly.

  • In the busy Job Fair, I tried to create a feeling of privacy and intimacy in my pop-up studio.

  • I chatted as I took pictures, encouraging my subjects to relax and to move gently in front of the camera.

  • I guided them gently into easy poses – “Bring your other shoulder towards me.” “Lower your chin slightly.”

  • I showed them the portraits I’d made, and offered to make more if they wanted.

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What struck me forcibly was the strength of my subjects’ reactions when they saw the portraits I’d made. As members of a generation that needs no excuse to take selfies at every moment, most of them seemed to recognise that I had managed to achieve something different. They were delighted and amazed.

Tags: headshot, relaxation

Behind The Scenes

March 17, 2024 in being a photographer

Clients, or their friends or colleagues, often take photos of me taking photos of them – whether in the studio, on-site in their offices, or elsewhere.

If I’m aware of this, I always ask them to send me one or two of the pictures. It’s fun to see my work from a different perspective, and over the years I’ve accumulated quite a collection of such images.

Now I’ve made a new gallery to share them. Take a look!

Tags: BTS, Behind the Scenes

Event photography

January 22, 2024 in event photography

As we get back into the rhythm of the corporate event calendar, I’ve been reflecting on the role that photography plays. As a photographer, how can I best contribute to the organiser’s efforts to communicate their event?

Traditional event photography primarily served as a record – of the ministerial handshake, the chief executive’s speech, and the award ceremony. Such images still serve a purpose, of course, and I’m happy to make posed portraits of individuals or groups if required.

But what my clients mostly want these days is photos that “capture the essence of our event” as one put it recently – photos that convey the excitement in the room. They want images that remind participants what a good time they had, and make non-participants curse their bad luck and promise themselves to go next year.

I wish I’d been there

A successful event photo evokes the response: I wish I’d been there!

It could be an image of the fabulous venue, or of the canapés at the reception. But most of all it will be an image of human connection. So what I always look for is emotion and interaction, heads turning, hands pointing, laughter. And, above all, the eyes of people fully focused on what someone else is saying. Because although a photograph cannot convey the content of a conference, it can show how information and ideas pass between us.

Tags: event, conference, unposed
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