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After diligently promoting your photography expertise and consistently engaging on social media, you’ve achieved a milestone: Your mini portrait sessions are fully booked!
While it’s tempting to sit back and revel in the fully occupied slots on your calendar, it’s essential to remain proactive. The next challenge? Ensuring diversity in the short, 15-minute sessions for each client.
Here’s a pro tip: Embrace flow posing. This strategy is paramount if you aim to maintain concise, efficient sessions while ensuring a diverse gallery for your clients. Flow posing is the key to balancing efficiency with variety.
Flow posing is a streamlined approach to guiding your clients through various poses swiftly.
This versatile method works seamlessly with individuals, couples, families, and even our furry friends. The essence lies in pre-planning a sequence of poses. This way, during mini portrait sessions, if you ever hit a roadblock with a particular pose, you’re well-equipped to guide your clients smoothly through the next one.
Flow posing is great for mini portrait sessions because, during these kinds of events, you’re inevitably short on time but still need to get a variety of poses for your gallery.
Learning this gives you the chance to study the best ways to move people organically through different poses so that you can easily mix things up to get multiple options in one spot.
This can be done by adjusting something simple within the pose. Here are some simple tips to help get you started with flow posing:
Use your client questionnaire to find out what is the number one shot your clients are hoping to get during their session.
Is it a picture of everyone looking at the camera with their best smiles? Or is it a love-soaked candid photo of family members interacting with one another?
Whatever it may be, you can make that one shot your focus at the beginning and get it done. After you’ve crossed that must-have shot off your list, you can begin to move through your other flow of poses from there.
To make getting the necessary information from that questionnaire easier, send out the questionnaire automatically before the session by incorporating it into your mini session workflow in Iris. By taking this step, you ensure you perfectly prepared for your mini portrait sessions.
Mastering flow posing might appear daunting initially, but the key lies in consistent practice. Begin by analyzing photos that resonate with you, then experiment with these poses personally to gauge what feels organic.
Once you’ve become comfortable with a specific pose, challenge yourself: how can you seamlessly transition to another? As you iterate this process, it’ll become second nature to effortlessly transition between poses during your mini portrait sessions, enhancing the fluidity and dynamism of your sessions.
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What are some ways that you keep moving when you get stuck during a session? Let us know in the comments below!