loved the cum allover her face ..so nice n hot..n she has so pretty face ..
loved n enjoyed seeing the cum all over her face...
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she is very cute I love her tiny tits and tan lines mmmm
Thanks for sharing guys, this is a great! Keep up the great work
I'd love to see this complete series without censorship
http://www.facialforum.net/showthrea...l=1#post534069
she is so beautiful with this lingerie.
Wow! Love it
Just bought new camera Nikon d5300 with 18-105 lenses and SB-700 flash, and have some question to fellow photographers here. It's easy enough to find articles how to make portraits, landscapes and so on, I actually had also completed some courses, but just thought, maybe there are some hints and tips on how to shoot porn and erotic pictures? I mean arrangement of lightning, optimal equipment, etc.
So we'll be happy to hear your opinions and advices if you have some )
There are a ton of options, but I find when shooting first person porn, I want it to be simple and I don't want to have to think about it (I just want to think about the sex, not the photography.) So when you're shooting that kind of "first person" stuff, I typically would recommend:
- pointing the flash at the ceiling in TTL mode (where the flash automatically adjusts its own power for proper exposure; this is the default), and if possible, get it off the camera. Pointing it at the ceiling gives a soft and even light. It's relatively flat, so its not dynamic, and people would say it isn't the "best" or most "high end", but its dead simple and it ensures even lighting, no hot spots or dark shadows.
- get your hands on 1CTO color correction gels and put it on your flash (I think Nikons might come with those?? I shoot Canon, so I don't know for sure); that will make it the same color as your indoor lights. This prevents strange color casts... While you're at it, set your cameras color balance to Tungsten. If you don't have these gels, keep the color balance on either auto or flash.
- setting the camera in Aperture Priority, using an aperture of 8 so you don't have to worry about perfect focus
- use a high enough ISO so you can expose the ambient light to about -0.5 to -1 EV while maintaining a shutter speed of at least 1/80, if not 1/100. Indoors this will probably mean at least ISO 1600, as high as 6400. The extra noise you get from high ISO is MUCH better than a blurry or poorly exposed photo.
- Set your focus mode to "all points" so you can basically treat your camera like a point and shoot (you don't have to worry about putting the centre dot on her eye, focusing, then recomposing)
It's also a good idea just to experiment. Every room will behave differently, and at different times of the day. Good luck and happy fucking!
Good tips Rock Boss.
To add to what has already been said, you may also want to consider shooting shooting in JPEG/camera raw, which allows you to save pics if your white balance is off, among other things. Of course, you need to have Photoshop or some other program that can read and edit those files.
Getting a separate light, or even better several, with the "umbrella" in front of them is a great way to get a good amount of even, soft light. It may make it unnecessary to use the flash, and keep a nice fast shutter speed to eliminate any motion blur. Rock Boss is correct that you want to point the flash at the ceiling, assuming you are not shooting in a room with high vaulted ceilings. The bounced, indirect light will be much more pleasing. If you don't want to buy the real photography type lights, just make sure to use some additional lights indirectly in the room to provide adequate lighting. The average bedroom lighting is wholly inadequate to be conducive to good quality pictures.
Once nice thing about a DSLR is you can do mush more "artistic-looking" shots, such as ones with a very shallow depth of field by using an f-stop of 2.8 or whatever the largest aperture is for your lens. Just remember you need a lot of light with the larger apertures to keep your shutter speed hast enough to avoid blurring. Having a large depth of field is useful many times, so you can keep her face, tits, and pussy all in focus in a pic. But a shallow depth of field makes for very interesting pictures as well, where you can emphasize one part while relegating others (or even just the background) to the unfocused part of the picture. This can also make your pictures look more professional than the typical point and shoot amateur pics with everything in focus.
If nothing else, just play with the camera, try different settings, and see which ones work for you. If some pics don't turn out it is no big deal, since you can just delete them. And if you don't have many good ones from a particular set, you get to go back for another try, which ain't all bad either. :)
I'm looking forward to seeing some pics from that new camera. I think the high quality camera will be a nice compliment for your beautiful wife. If you have more questions, please just ask.
Ernie
Thanks for the hints Ernie and Rock_boss ) Some of things you said I already knew, and some were new to me and very useful )
We are still practicing with new camera, and have not that much good pics, yet. Also additional flash was used only once due to NiMH batteries failure :(
Here are few examples of our experiments )