Joelle was a first time model who visited our studio for a test shoot recently. Below are her thoughts on the shoot and my take on what the real first timer needs to know.
My view:
“You’re so pretty! You should be a model!”
I have no statistical data to back this up but, in my experience these last seven years as a professional photographer I think that most if not all of the pretty girls in the world have heard that phrase at some point in their lives.
I knew from our earliest phone conversation that Joelle was one of ‘those’ girls, tall and good looking and I knew that, for whatever reason, she had reached the point in her life where she was going to give pro pictures a try.
From Joelle:
Friends, family and strangers have always asked me why I don’t model, but I just thought they only said that because I have always been tall and thin. It probably helps that I have blonde hair with green/blue eyes…Makes me fit the typical ‘All American’ look that most people think fit the mold to be a model. I on the other hand was a little reluctant. As a teenager especially I was scared to pursue it because every teenager is a little self conscious, so starting a modeling career, I felt I would be scrutinized even more than I scrutinize myself. Well, now that I am older, I certainly appreciate my body and love all parts of my body. It help that a brutally honest person, my husband, is pushing me and encouraging me, so I thought now was a good time to try it out.
My view:
Being pretty is good. Being drop dead gorgeous is good but, in truth, neither one of those factors by itself is enough to get you any actual modeling work. Modeling, believe it or not, is a skill. There is an art to posing and expression just as there is an art to lighting and capturing them. There is an art to the hard work involved in networking that is so vital within the fashion/glamour/promo modeling industry and the models who really learn that side of the business will usually do better than those who don’t.
But first things first, let’s get to the shoot:
From Joelle:
I thought it would be faster paced. I thought the clothes, well my clothes would be tossed everywhere, and I’d be putting on and off clothes very fast, just go go go, click here and there and on to the next.
Instead… I did have outfit changes but a lot of outfits can be altered just a little bit and make a new outfit all together… add a jacket, change shoes, keep the bottom but just change the top. I learned that in photos they all look like completely different outfits. It’s just efficient the way it was done and I liked it. Also, there weren’t a ton of shots being taken all at once. Shannon waited for the pose and movement of my body and then took the shot at the right moment. There wasn’t a ton of flashes continuously. It was not overwhelming which was nice for a beginner like me.
I thought the staff may be stiff, not open and friendly, and I was concerned I might not be able to get comfortable in front of the photographer and stylist with that kind of energy. Well instead, they were all chatty, very friendly, supportive, there was laughter which helps me loosen up, and encouragement from everyone on the shoot. I was overly helped and it felt great.
And, just thinking of my past teenage insecurities, I thought I’d have just a little criticism on my body, which I was ready to take, but for my first shoot at least, I wasn’t told anything negative. So why did I do an extra AB workout the morning before the shoot? Ha.
My view:
Shooting an amateur model at a professional pace doesn’t work. Experienced models understand the need to change a pose/expression with every flash of the lights but beginner’s don’t and if you try to push them they just lock up. In addition they don’t have a repertoire of poses yet. Experienced models have multiple turns and twists they can throw at you because they’ve done them before and they know what works – most beginners, well, you get the drift.
Remember these people are paying us. The goal is to get real pictures in a model’s chosen genre that he or she can use on an Agency comp card (model’s business card). My team and I spend a lot of time with a new model telling or showing them how to turn their bodies so that their pictures don’t end up looking like really well lit senior portraits.
Joelle’s physical beauty was obvious. She was, like most first timers, very stiff in her movements. Typically this lessens as the shoot goes on, in her case it did dramatically which was helped, I think, by the slower pace and all the snickering from my styling team as they watched me helping our model by demonstrating the basic model S curve…
From Joelle:
I learned a ton by the minute, I felt it was such an amazing experience and feeling to have instant gratification when I could feel myself loosening up and having a good photo session, which did continue to progress in my eyes. When looking back at the photos there is a huge difference and honestly, a completely different person from beginning to end.
I learned a lot about lighting, posing, moving the body, eye contact, placement of your hands and arms, and certainly placement of the hips. More hips! LOL. Knowing your body and what each part is doing all at once. I learned it isn’t easy. It was an awesome challenge.
I began to understand the order of how Shannon had me shooting, starting from fun and smiles to get me loosened up, and then progress into serious and sexy high fashion shots. He was a great leader through each section of the shoot and outfit changes.
My view:
She did progress very quickly. There is a point that can come in a new model shoot, usually fairly early on, that involves the sudden, two pronged realization that:
1. ‘This is way harder than it looks on America’s Next Top Model’
2. ‘This is fun, these people are here to help me, and I’m going to go for it’.
What happens when that point doesn’t arrive in a model’s psyche?
He or she goes home with a bunch of really well lit senior portraits, that’s what.
In Joelle’s case the moment did arrive and she really went for it. In fact we sent some of her pictures to one of the top tier local modeling agencies and they asked her to come in for an interview – always a good thing. What happens from here in is between a model, her agency or agencies, and Lady Luck. Joelle is a very bright young woman, something tells me that if she applies herself to the business she will have a lot of fun, make some money, and get the chance to make her mama really, really proud.
I asked Joelle what she would have liked to have done differently…
From Joelle:
The only extra perk of a shoot that could be beneficial for the model and even the photographer and staff is being able to instantly see the photo taken on a large screen. I know I could benefit seeing myself right then and there because I could learn what was hot and what was not instantly. Instead of me saying when I leave and later see my photos, “well next time I will do”… this and that. Instead, to benefit the entire shoot and the model to continue to learn even more all at once, it would be such a great idea to have the latest photo taken wirelessly projected on a screen or wall for everyone to see and learn from. As a beginner I am not sure this has ever been done or not the’ norm’, but I think it would be a great invention and/or addition to a photo shoot set.
My view:
Once a shoot goes live the only and I mean the ONLY place a model needs to be looking is into the lens of the camera. A screen or a mirror would be a giant distraction in much the same way that an overbearing mother or grumpy boyfriend giving posing ‘tips’ from the side can. A model’s attention is split, that never works.
Let me repeat: that never works.
Once the lights go on it’s you and the camera, everything you have goes into that lens.
That’s it for now, hope you enjoyed this dual view of a first time shoot and, oh by the way, here are some of her pictures, thank you Joelle, for your hard work in the studio and for taking the time to write down your thoughts.


