What makes a Portrait good?

Portraits for me are subjective: they reflect my relationship with the subject. This might be through a sense of history, knowledge or association, or the fact that the image demands my attention in a special way. It's not about aperture, speed, flash or film; it's about demanding or inviting me into a relationship however fleeting with the subject. My image of my son with my grandson (check my gallery - the image is regretfully not on my laptop) evokes this relationship: it's intensely personal. It probably fails technically on many levels, but my relationship with the subject is what makes it for me. You may look at it technically and consider its many faults, whereas I see through its faults, if I recognise them at all, to embrace the the relationship which for me is the essence of the image. Portraits are personal, not universal in my view, they speak personally or they do not.
 
> Is this the one?
> Wayne

That portrait has imprinted on me. It's been months since I've last seen it, but I remember it vividly.

That is a good portrait, the ones that stick in your mind that make you remember the individual at a given moment in their life.
 
My oppinion:

Camera body? Nope
Lens focal length? Nope
Lens F stop? Nope
Lens signature? Nope
Film format? Nope
Film ISO? Nope
Color film or B&W film? Nope
Film developer for B&W film? Nope
Paper developer for B&W? Nope
The paper the portrait is printed on? Nope
Camera height in relationship to the subject? Nope
Quality of the light? Partially
The lighting ratio? Partially
The lighting pattern? Possibly
The background? Partially
The way the subject is posed when their image is captured? Possibly
The expression of the subject? Possibly
The eyes of the beholder or the check book holder? Definitely
The memories invoked with the viewing of the portrait? Definitely

Should the person being photographed be captured with a razor sharp lens showing every eyelash, freckle and mole? Nope
Or should they be slightly “touched-up” to remove blemishes? Nope

Should we portray the person as they appear to us now, as they once appeared or as they wish to appear? Not necessarily

My contribution:
Good portrait commercially: The one that makes the client happy, proud, and especially happy to pay you.
Good portrait "aesthetically" (whatever that should mean - beautiful, interesting, novel, stylish, etc): When it provokes a reaction in the viewer in some way, a positive reaction - or even a negative if that's the intent, e.g. portrait of a war victim should not make one smile and say beautiful. The technicalities like lens aperture, light etc are only the tools that can make easier/harder/possible/impossible to realize the portrait.

But i'm not a portrait photographer, so it might be a bit of a naive approach.
 
dkirchge said:
It's probably not technically a portrait, more of a candid shot, but somewhere on this site there is an stunning B&W photo of a young ballerina at the barre isolated in light streaming in from a window... I forget who shot it. I have no idea what was used to shoot the picture beyond it being a rangefinder and I could care less. It's a perfectly natural, unforced situation with an absolutely brilliant combination of subject, light, and "f8 and be there." I would kill to have a shot that good in my portfolio.
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JLW's photo of Australian dancer Danielle Hincks http://www.rangefinderforum.com/photopost/data/500/92-09-04_33.jpg
 
Interesting thread! I agree with some here that it's almost completely subjective. I like to take portraits of friends playing music. For me then the most important is to get something of their passion and delight on the film, and sometimes a very grainy out-of-focus shot works the best and the 'technically perfect' shots are just boring.

Sharpness/softness, and headshot or more environmental protrait also depend on the age and character of the subject. For some reason I keep coming back to this portrait of Truman Capote by HCB. The face is out of focus, but the leaves add some strange quality, I can't really define it.
 
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ChrisN said:


I agree that this is a very striking portrait.

Here are some of the reasons why I like it:

I am male and the subject is a striking member of the opposite sex.

The lighting pattern on her face is "Rembrandt", broadside highlighted with a triangular highlight on her left cheek.

Catchlights visible in both eyes giving her an "alive" look. The eyes are the windows to a person's soul.

The lighting ratio is very high making for dramatic highlights and dark shadows.

There are leading lines that take the viewer's gaze to her face. At least here in the USA we read a page from left to right, and we have a tendency to view a photo from left to right also. We also tend to notice the brightest area of a photo first, which in this case are her eyes and face. This is a good thing in portrait photography.

The composition is such that the photo is well balanced (rule of 1/3's). The back ground is subdued, but present, so that we can tell she is a dancer.

One eye is on the "Golden Mean" of the photo.

It is in b&w, no distraction from colored objects.

Thanks for posting this one and the other photos. I like seeing photos that are meaningful, even if it is of your latest piece of GAS🙂

Wayne
 
Just another thought, and again just what I like in a portrait myself. The protrait should reveal something about the character and personality of the subject. Maybe head shots work best for extrovert people, shy people seem frightened to me in this case. For more introvert people, I like environmental portraits best. And I love environmental portraits of people doing their work, especially if it's a craft like building musical instruments, and you can see how skilled they are and how much they enjoy it.
 
Panoramix said:
Just another thought, and again just what I like in a portrait myself. The protrait should reveal something about the character and personality of the subject. Maybe head shots work best for extrovert people, shy people seem frightened to me in this case. For more introvert people, I like environmental portraits best. And I love environmental portraits of people doing their work, especially if it's a craft like building musical instruments, and you can see how skilled they are and how much they enjoy it.


Excellent points!!!!

Wayne
 
Frank Granovski said:
Yes, if I had been shooting in more light because people here in Vancouver seem to prefer the dorkness (unless I'm shooting outside in sunshine or when it's overcast but bright enough for 200/400 asa flashless speeds). 🙂

People prefer the dorkness?

In that case, I should become a portrait photographer - they'll love me!

Best Regards,

Bill "Prince of Dorkness" Mattocks
 
Wayne R. Scott said:
What makes a good portrait? I am assuming analog capture here.

Camera body?
Lens focal length?
Lens F stop?
Lens signature?
Film format?
Film ISO?
Color film or B&W film?
Film developer for B&W film?
Paper developer for B&W?
The paper the portrait is printed on?
Camera height in relationship to the subject?
Quality of the light?
The lighting ratio?
The lighting pattern?
The background?
The way the subject is posed when their image is captured?
The expression of the subject?
The eyes of the beholder or the check book holder?
The memories invoked with the viewing of the portrait?

Wayne


It ALL CONTRIBUTES to a perfect portrait, but it does not MAKE it !
If it is good or not not depends on the presentation of the subject only , if you were able to show it's personality .

bertram
 
Mackinaw said:
I look at it differently. To me a good portrait is when you successfully capture the subject's personality on film.

Jim Bielecki

I would make your sentence more precise: when you are able to render the subject the way you want. Many politicians have used through the years the cheap trick of being photographed from a low position in order to transmit a feeling of power. Sometimes this was the case, sometimes not, but this doesn't imply anything about the quality of these photographs. Even more extreme with portraits in advertisments where the people shotted are professional models (perhaps you don't classify this as "portrait")...

How to give the feeling you want about the subject is a billion dollar question...
I believe it is a combination. On one hand you must be able to master the media you use from lights to the final print (or to know what to ask to the person who take care of the parts of the process you don't do personally, like color development and print). On the other hand you need to have the ability to make the "model" do what you want (this could be just "being natural").
I think very little is related to equipment. I have seen several great portraits posted on a well-known Italian newsgroup of photography which were made with a Vivitar lens with C41 film using only natural light and a few well placed boards.

Of course, once you start making a living from your picture you might want to have "the best possible result" and this eventually will lead you to look for lenses and lights but this is not what make great portraits. Well, in my opinion at least...

Giella lea Fapmu
 
Wayne,

I find it interesting that you bring this up now, as I am embarking on the study of portraiture by reading the past. I have purchased a number of 'how to' portraiture books on eBoy that were published in the 1930's and 1940's. I find myself drawn to the 'style' of formal B&W and early color portraits that were done during that time. As you know, I am not good with portraits, so I am working on it because I want to become good.

Here are some thoughts in answer to your questions:

The portrait is generally a commissioned work. Thus, the question of what makes a portrait meaningful to me is less important that what makes it meaningful to the client, who presumably is paying for it.

This also answers the questions about how a subject should be portrayed. If I am a client wishing a portrait taken, I would certainly prefer that my wishes be honoured. If this is not to be the case, because the portrait photographer has a 'signature style' or chooses to do their own thing, then that's fine, but as a client, I should know that in advance and choose it - or not choose it, as personal preference dictates. Clients, I believe, should not be told they'll take what's given.

Is 'the customer always right' in the sense that the portrait should please them? In most cases, yes, I believe that. If they wish a double-chin or a blemish to not appear on their portrait, even if it is a distinguishing feature, then that's what they should get - they're paying for it. However, I recognize that there are famous portrait photographers who have a particular style and that is how they do portraits. People come to them because they wish that style to be applied to them, and in that case, they understand that they get what they get - but they have willingly agreed to that. I would say that most portrait photographers haven't the clout or name recognition or fame (whatever you call it) to demand that they be given the freedom to do as they please with a customer's portrait and get away with it. However, I suppose one has to make a name for oneself somehow, if that is what one desires to do.

The formal portrait, done in a studio, is one of the few types of photography where the photographer is in control (or should be) of everything but the shape of the client's head (even makeup often coming under the purview of the photographer at times). With that type of control, it is really more down to the ability of the photographer than what nature happens to provide in the way of lighting, setting, angles, and so on. Of course, outdoor portraiture is different, more control is given up in exchange for what Mother Nature can provide in the way of making more of the photograph.

As to lighting equipment, although there are certainly ways to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a state-of-the-art studio, excellent portraits that can hardly be criticized even by today's standards were taken with cameras, lenses, and lights that today we would relegate to obsolete trash. This means that if that 'obsolete' equipment were to be employed today in the same fashion it was then, the results in the hands of an expert should be the same - excellent portraiture. Most of the 'rules' of portrait photography have not changed since the advent of fast film. Arrangement of lighting, posing, and accent (focal point, sharpness, backgrounds, etc) go in and out of style, of course, but the basics are still as they were done by portrait photographers of long ago. A hairlight is still a hairlight, in other words, even if the type of light bulb used has changed many times over the years.

As it pertains to camera equipment, it seems to me that what it really comes down to are lens, focal length, and format, presuming well-functioning equipment that can be properly controlled by the photographer. I don't think I'd fret over an inexpensive lens on an 8x10 view camera - it would hardly matter if it were not uber-sharp. On a 35mm camera, I'd probably choose sharp over soft - but only because now we can 'fix' a photo by making it less soft in the computer later - we cannot restore sharpness that was never recorded. I love to obsess over lenses as a hobby, but in practice, I think it only matters in the grossest details, not the finest. I doubt that anyone viewing a portrait could tell the difference between the same portrait shot with a modern Nikon or modern Canon lens - even a (gasp) modern Leica. Coated vs uncoated - I'm not as certain, perhaps some could tell.

The trick, of course, is to choose what's appropriate. Not all portraits are 'head shots', so a medium length lens is not always right. Some clients might not feel comfortable with a camera stuck right in front of their face, so a longer focal length might help them relax with the camera held back a bit. Porportion can be modified, hopefully under the photographer's control, by focal length as well. The type of lens can also have an impact, subtle though it may be. Petzval lenses or doppel-anastigmats as opposed to modern Gaussian or older Tessar styles can alter how the focus complements - or does not compliment - the subject's face. I believe that one can actually subconsciously evoke an era that will resonate with viewers of a certain age by selecting lighting (least subtle), film type (less subtle) and lens type (more subtle) - even if one chooses to go with modern clothing and backgrounds. But that's just a guess - I hope to pursue it to find out for sure.

With all that said - there is still an awful lot of room for personal style and preference by the photographer. And there should be, else the portrait photographer would be a mechanic and not an engineer. It cannot all be reduced to a series of lighting ratios and formulas and lens types and film - or a monkey could do it.

And we see that at Walmart and Kmart portrait studios all over the USA. Each has a studio, and they have two main lights and a camera and a computer program and an operator. I hesitate to say 'photographer' although I am sure that is technically what they are called. And I do not disparage them, a job is a job these days, and it may well lead them to greater things. But I doubt that they have a great deal of creative input into the product they churn out - speed is without doubt the name of the game here. Posing is probably about the only area where they can bring that most important of photographer's qualities to bear - imagination and creativity.

But I examine my friends and families' Walmart and Kmart photos and I sometimes see an excellent photo that captures something unique and special about the subject. More often, I see a well-exposed and technically correctly lit photograph of nothing in particular. And often enough to depress me, I see technical flaws which should never have been seen by a client's eyes - collars turned up, ties askew, background edges showing, dirty backgrounds and foregrounds, dirty faces, unkempt hair, eyes closed, even out-of-focus faces from time to time. But I also note that my friends and family are, as a general rule, happy enough with this product - there is no point criticizing the photos, they like them.

But what makes a portrait of a person meaningful to me, as the viewer? If I can detect something of his or her character in the photograph, if I feel that I am indeed seeing some portion of the real person, then it is meaningful to me.

Both Karsh and Mortensen had very, very, different styles, although both were master portraitists. Both, however, knew that everyone wears masks. A master photographer shows enough of the mask that it pleases the subject, and enough of the person underneath that it pleases the viewer. Forget the Golden Mean, that's a ratio that is hard to quantify, and it seperates the good from the great in the way of portrait photography.

A portrait photographer is that artist, inserted between a subject and a camera, who turns the image of a face into the image of a person.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks
 
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I think that a "good" portrait contains one or more of the following three:

A quality that produces an emotional connection with the subject. That is, he or she recognizes something authentic of him or herself in the image.

A quality that produces an emotional connection with viewers who are themselves emotionally connected with the subject.

A quality that produces an emotional connection or an emotional reaction with viewers otherwise unconnected emotionally with the subject.

The sole surviving snapshot of a deceased loved-one would fit this definition regardless of the technical quality of the picture. Or even a casual snapshot of a child. Or the famous portrait of Winston Churchill by Youseff Karsh. Poor technique can get in the way, to be sure, but the point of making a picture of this type is to record something essential about the subject.

Interesting thread.
 
IMHO, a "good" anything in art is on the eyes of the beholder.
And sometimes, something arrives that everyone, or almost everyone, likes.
Just like one redhead girl with green eyes.... 😀
 
I don't know, it's just me; I like them as unposed as possible and with available light. Then again, I'm not talking commercial portraits.

This one is with a Leica M6, 50mm Summilux, Fuji X-tra 400, hand-held, at f/1.4 and I think it was 1/125 sec. She was just standing behind the counter and I asked her if I could take her picture.
 
To me there are two kinds of portraits. Formal and candid. They are both intentional acts on the part of both the photographer and the subject. A snapshot of someone no matter how sharp or cute is not a portrait.

I think the term is being bandied about rather loosely here. I have some nice snapshots of friends taken over the years but I do not consider them portraits. I have some great shots of my wife and children as well but only a few were actually portraits.

Portrature is a a specific photographic discipline and one that is not easily mastered.

While there are some general lighting guidelines used over the years I have shot more than a few very good portraits that broke those rules .

As an example I was shooting some really beautiful women as part of a hair salon's promo years ago. I had all the lighting (quartz and strobe) gear there and was using all of it to get what I thought were some great shots. We took a break and Randi, one of the models stepped to the back door of the salon and opened it to get some air. It was late in the afternoon and the sun was low and there was a very nice indirect diffused sort of light being reflected from the white back door of the salon. I shot one of the best shots (imo) I ever got using light from the door. No quartz light. No strobes. But it was an intentional shot. Not an accident or chance exposure.

Another time I was visiting a video producer friend and we were outside his apartment. The bug light gave everything a very interesting look and I asked David to pose for me. This shot also worked out well imo.

But they were both intentionally shot as candid portraits.

Both of them were shot with a Minolta 7000 with a 50 mm lens. using plus-x. I developed and printed the one of David. I had a lab do the one of Randi in 11x14.
 
bmattock said:
Wayne,

A portrait photographer is that artist, inserted between a subject and a camera, who turns the image of a face into the image of a person.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks

Well put. That is what a portrait photographer should be. If you're good at it, that is exactly what you are.
 
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