this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2024
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But a professional photographer taking a staged picture should know how to frame the shot so that the shadows work in your favor.
Oh yeah definitely still the photographer's fault.
I just wanted to point out their strange implication that sunny days wouldn't produce shadows. It's pretty difficult to take good portraits at peak sunlight.
Assuming the family wasn't like, "NO, WANT HERE. THIS SPOT." and "What do you mean? It's beautiful out!"
Plenty of people are plenty smart. Intelligence in one area does not equal intelligence in another. Common sense and decency also falls on a wholly different scale.
Though this is a super old meme/photo. So maybe we know the story, if there is one beyond what it says.
Nope this looks like mid-day sun, there is no magic framing that can solve this problem. Here are some of the options the photographer could've used:
Or any combination of the above.
Or know the right time of day to schedule an outdoor shoot.
There's no way to work with clear overhead sun. You pick another time of day or shoot in the shade.
Sure there are, they're just much higher effort and require to know how to work diffusion, reflection, lights etc. Probably need to hire at least one grip to help on the shoot. Price will be much higher.