I was looking for source pictures of Scott and found his best smile so far.
Try smiling like you are but focus on the camera lens (It helps you avoid the glazed look.). Also try not grinning so much. As always, things like natural light (Though try not to be standing in direct sunlight.) and standing at a slight angle, will help.
Try smiling like you are but focus on the camera lens (It helps you avoid the glazed look.). Also try not grinning so much. As always, things like natural light (Though try not to be standing in direct sunlight.) and standing at a slight angle, will help.
Correction - Don't focus on the camera lens - If you look right down the barrel of the camera, it makes it ten times harder to have a natural looking photo, and you tend to get a look like the subject is trying to stare the photographer down. What you want to do is look NEAR the lens, somewhere about 2-4 inches to either side, preferably, or if someone is using the viewfinder rather than the screen, focus on the photographer's ear. Sounds weird, but it works.
I was looking for source pictures of Scott and found his best smile so far.
Try smiling like you are but focus on the camera lens (It helps you avoid the glazed look.). Also try not grinning so much. As always, things like natural light (Though try not to be standing in direct sunlight.) and standing at a slight angle, will help.
Can someone appose me with some awesome stuff, like the Stanley Cup or maybe six geodudes? Also, maybe appose awesome stuff with awesmoe stuff, like six geodudes with the Stanley Cup. Take things we like and combine them with completely unrelated things we like. That is a formula for awesome that has always worked.
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Try smiling like you are but focus on the camera lens (It helps you avoid the glazed look.). Also try not grinning so much.
As always, things like natural light (Though try not to be standing in direct sunlight.) and standing at a slight angle, will help.
Sounds weird, but it works.
Yes that is on purpose.