Workshops

What Happened in Chicago at the Workshop! :)

Me Ra Koh

Remember this group of beautiful ladies in Chicago? You may recognize them modeling one of our most popular Photo Coaching tips, The Fake Laugh! 🙂

Well, it’s time we brag on them and share the whole story of what went down in Chicago!

We brought in four moms and their babies to be models for a live hands on shoot. And we gave our workshop attendees this beautiful space for the photo shoot with awesome lighting, incredible decor, and amazing backgrounds. NOT! (The last time I said NOT! like that was probably seventh grade, but there is no better word for this moment.) Gretchen, I know you are dying right now! 🙂

What would our workshop attendees learn if we gave them a perfect setting to shoot in? As Brian and I say in our workshops, our job is to frustrate you during the live shoots. This isn’t your typical workshop where all the surroundings are perfect. We want to help you run into walls so we can help you learn to climb over the wall. We want the lighting to be tricky and challenging because our goal is that when you do your first portrait shoot or take photos of your kids, you will be confident no matter what your lighting is. So instead of a beautiful setting with perfect surroundings, awesome lighting and incredible decor and don’t forget amazing backgrounds, we gave them THIS! VOILA! (Thanks to our wonderful hostesses help! ;))

Yep, that really is dirty, vintage filing cabinets and tungsten lit lamps hanging from the ceiling.

I will never forget some of the women’s faces when we showed them the room we were going to do the live shoot in. They must have thought Brian and I were crazy. But with courage and a willingness to go for it, the attendees turned their cameras on and tried putting all they had been learning into practice. Brian and I helped them along as they ran into walls. It was so rewarding to see the women smile as they realized that even in horrible lighting, you can capture BEAUTIFUL shots. Can I share their shots with you! Brian and I are super proud of our Chicago ladies!

Due to low light, the women took advantage of low aperture and higher ISOs…but not to high to make sure the grain wouldn’t take over. Be encouraged ladies, some of these women were beginners and shooting these images in Manuel Mode! And keep in mind that the little daylight we had from the windows was gone in less than 30 minutes. I’m telling you, these women deserve a standing ovation!

This beautiful image was taken by Candace. Just breathtaking!

Gretchen, our AMAZING hostess, caught this image. I love how she captured the baby’s hand with that sweet little face. So precious. Look at those lips!

Debbie and Kathleen captured two different perspectives of one of the mom’s with her baby. But both images are so intimate and framed in a way that exudes warmth between mama and baby. Here is Debbie’s image.

Here is Kathleen’s beautiful color image. Different perspective of mama and baby but still so beautiful.

Here is another tight framed color image that Lauren took! I love how she shot down on this little one. You know mama is there, but we don’t need to see mama’s face. Beautiful, amazing job Lauren!

And one more that you must see of this mom and baby. Sherry did a great job of clipping in just enough of mom and her profile, but the use of light to illuminate the baby’s face is gorgeous. The women didn’t have any lights or flashes when taking these images. They worked with aperture and ISO, and wow, wouldn’t you love an image like this of you and your baby?!

Allison caught this precious shot. This will have to bring a smile to all the attendees because there is no way any of us can forget how happy this little girl was! She was quite the model! I especially love this image b/c it has that photo journalistic feel to it. You see the background and know stuff is going on, but we are caught up by the little one’s emotion. Great job Allison!

Lynette captured the joy from a different point of view. You can almost hear her giggle. There is such great energy in this image!

Here are two other perspectives of this bundle of joy.

This precious shot was captured by Nicki. The framing of this little one playing with her mom’s necklace is so sweet. Nicki, you have such a wonderful eye for catching the moment before it is gone. I can’t wait to hear what becomes of your photography dreams!

Different perspective and still so beautiful. This is Pamela’s image. Pamela was watching the same moment but framed and composed her image a little different. This is where I fall in love with photography that much more because two people can see the same thing and walk away with different images. There is room for everyone. Good job Pamela!

As this little one calmed down and started to get tired, Becky was there to capture this image. Whenever I see this image, I lean in to it because I feel like I can almost hear the mom whisper in her ear. Becky, you did a great job getting out of the box and capturing an angle that was different than face on.

Does anything compare to a mother’s comfort? Here is a different mom comforting her baby with soft whispers. I love this little baby’s head. I love the hairline that lines the roll on his neck and the sweet little ear. Wonderful job Tara. The mom’s face is so soft, and you captured it so well!

There were two sets of mothers and their daughters that attended the Chicago Workshop. Whenever we have moms and their daughters come it adds a beautiful dynamic to the group of watching two different generations become awakened to something creative inside them. The results are breath taking. Roma was one of the moms, and she captured this sweet image. I love how the baby’s face fills the frame, can’t you just feel those wet, sticky fingers! 🙂

The other mom and her two daughters all subconsciously had empty space in their images. It was amazing to see this connection between them as photographers and family!

And we can’t forget about dad and his little one!

Traci captured this amazing shot that is so quiet. Would you ever guess that Traci had the lighting conditions she did to work with? Or any of these other women for that matter?

Molly captured the same moment. And I love how Molly framed her image because you see all this commotion and feel it surrounding dad and baby, yet the way the dad and baby are lit is so quiet. Wonderful job Molly!

Who put the initials TSJ? You must tell us who you are! 🙂 TSJ did an AMAZING job at taking the same moment from a third perspective and getting in super tight. The results are breathtaking.

We must end with hands and feet images!

Paula captured this beautiful color image of the feet. Color in low light is so hard, and Paula makes it look so easy! I love that this is in color. The softness of the lighting is amazing. And the newborn feet with the dry skin we know so well, it’s amazing. Thank you Paula.

Kelli captured this fantastic shot of the baby’s outstretched hand. The perspective of mom’s hand blurred below makes this little one seem so small. Great framing Kelli!

Lynette focused in on the baby’s feet and ankles and let all the rest go to a soft blur with the low F stop. And it worked oh, so well. I love how we see mom’s hand, face and baby’s face all softly, quietly blurred. Isn’t this fun! We could look at these different perspectives all day!

And oh, look at this image. Wow, it will take your breath away (again!). Kristin captured this beautiful image. And yes, she did it in the same room we were all in. 🙂

And we can’t leave out a baby’s yawn! The yawn is one of the best things to capture when doing a baby shoot. There just isn’t any other yawn like a baby’s yawn. Kim, you rocked this shot! Your timing was spot on! Look at those eyes too! I love it! Great job!

Our goal is to help empower women so that they feel like their camera is a tool not an object of intimidation. I want the women who attend our workshops to leave with more confidence and assurance in their ability to shoot beautiful images in low light no matter how icky their background or surroundings might be. With a few tips, techniques and teaching on the camera’s functions, all of us can do it! Really, ALL of us! 🙂

If you have a second, post a comment and congratulate these women. They were not sure of that ugly room where we did our photo shoot, but they all gave it a chance and ended up with BEAUTIFUL results!

If you attended the Chicago workshop and didn’t see your name or image mentioned in today’s post, I am so sorry! I think I got everyone, but if I missed you please let me know!

And guess what, we started a new Facebook Group “MeRa Koh Workshops“. If you have been to one of
our workshops or hope to attend one in the future, we’d love to keep you updated and have you connect with women from all the different cities we’ve been too!

Great job Chicago ladies! Much love, Me Ra

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If you are interested in attending the Atlanta Workshop, click here for details/registration. Our friends over at Pictage and Triple Scoop Music are offering their members a special discount to our Atlanta workshop. If you didn’t get their newsletters or email and want to take advantage of the discount, shoot us an email! mera@fioria.us

***Today at 4pm PST, I’m going to do an interview if you’d like to listen in. Dane Sanders is the host, and we are going to have a blast for 30 minutes. If you’d like to join us, you need to sign up with Dane’s forums or coaching site. Go here for info on that! http://store.fasttrackphotographer.com Once your signed up, you can then go to this link to tune in http://XiosoftPresenter.com/?eventid=5488023 Around noon, you’ll be emailed a password to listen in on the interview. We’ll be twittering updates as we get closer! See you at 4pm today!

For fun photo exercises, check out our popular Instructional DVDs Refuse to Say Cheese (see the downloadable version that is now available if you live outside the US!), our 101 Kits for starting or expanding a business in photography, click on the words of your choice! To read a great review done on our DVDs, click here!

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  1. Lora says:

    WOW! I am really really impressed! Every single picture is gorgeous! And YES Mera I would have loved to have pictures like that with my babies, and I’m sad to say that I don’t. It is really encouraging to see how you ladies did with such poor lighting conditions. It is encouraging me to go shoot pics of my 18 month old right now in my home ( I usually wait for the right outdoor conditions) !!! Thank you for sharing Mera!

  2. Candice says:

    Me Ra and Brian,

    What a great reminder of how much fun we had! (Brian, you’ll be glad to know the 70-200mm has done a great job with the basketball shots in the gym!!) Thanks again for releasing that inner photographer that was dying to get out-

    Candice

  3. Sara Elliott says:

    Wow Ladies – those are some seriously good pictures!!! Amazing, really!!!

    Congrats you to you all and keep on snapping those pics!

    Sara

  4. Tina says:

    Wow, these shots are gorgeous! I’ve been aiming to get photos like these when I shoot my children, but I’m not always nearly this successful – I was proud enough to take all my photos on Christmas day with no flash and manual settings, but I certainly had better lighting than these ladies! Good job, all of you!

  5. Beautiful job! Looking at that room…ughh. 😉 That would’ve been a jolt the first time stepping in there. I read a little about the search for the “right” room on Gretchen’s blog the other day. But actually seeing it… wow!

    I’m in the dark northwest and am going to shoot a baby next week (indoors) and feel encouraged.
    BTW, nice picture Becky!! 🙂

  6. Michelle says:

    Wow..those are some beautiful shots. I think it is great that you helped show everyone how to work with not the most perfect conditions. I guess we were lucky in Sonoma with the perfect house to shoot in!

  7. Steph says:

    Wow, I can feel the sense of energy and accomplishment that you ladies must have felt after this assignment and yes the frustration too 😉 The hurdle was large but the out come was larger!! Great lesson for all of us.

  8. Wow! Those are some amazing shots! I would love to hear what some of the camera settings were for those images if anyone is willing to share! Great job ladies!!!

  9. Krista says:

    Congrats ladies – great work!

    And I love that you showed them how to work in less than ideal circumstances – perfect!

  10. Lauren says:

    Yay! I’m so glad you finally posted this! Great timing, too, because I had a terrible portrait experience today and I feel like CRAAAAAAP. It’s nice knowing that I *am* capable of taking good pictures. (I also took the last picture of Kathleen photographing baby & Mama.)

    My camera was set to 1600 ISO and I was borrowing a 50mm f/1.4 and I think I had it set to around 2.0 for the baby shot that Me Ra posted.

    I am still in awe over how great everyone did in that horrible room.

  11. beck says:

    Thanks for the shout out, Michelle! 🙂

    Yep, that exercise was easily the most challenging and most empowering shoot I’ve had to date. Who needs a studio if you can get results like that in a spare workroom? 🙂

  12. jeramy says:

    looks like a fabulous time! pinch yourself. “i get to do this for a living?” good stuff!

  13. Allison G. says:

    Low light shots are very hard….everyone did such an amazing job!!! Beautiful!!

  14. Candice says:

    Molly and I were using our kit lenses so we didn’t have nice low apertures. We hadn’t made the plunge yet to invest in nicer ones. My ISO was at 1600 – don’t remember the exact shutter speed, but it was really SLOW…maybe 1/13.

  15. Gretchen says:

    Me Ra – yes I was dying and I was beside myself as I watched the light disappear from our location. Yes, it forced us to think outside the box but as a hostess who was traipsing up and down all the stairs looking for the “perfect” lighting with YOU of all people- I was freaking out! Who would have thought, we could have the most awful lighting conditions and turn out so wonderful photos. I love all of them. It was a great lesson is overcoming the thought that you might not get anything worth keeping in a low light session.

    I was shooting at 1.8 and a high ISO for my photos. I think I amazed myself as well. I came away from the workshop with so much even though I was running around like a chicken with my head cut off. I wished that I could have slowed down just a bit to spend more time getting to know ALL the ladies.

    Thank you for the great post Me Ra…

  16. Dawn B says:

    WOW! Myself being a beginner, I am so impre4ssed by these shots! They all did such a great job….just beautiful shots all the way around!!! Great job girls!

  17. Molly says:

    Candice recalls correctly that I was on 1600 and very, very slow. Me Ra and Brian, seeing these reminds me what a wonderful experience this was for me, and I wouldn’t trade anything for it. Do you do a phase II? Anyway, I’m thinking of a photography workshop for this year but it’ll have big shoes to fill to equal the Chicago workshop…

    Thanks for the post, Me Ra, I’ve been looking forward to this. Happy New Year!

  18. Pamela says:

    Just a quick note that TSJ, is Traci from Wisconsin! Isn’t she so talented, too. I did a session in her store & she worked magic with a baby from behind me. She has a way with them for sure. Here was my very first session in manual, with Traci behind me. Thank you, Traci! http://strohlie.blogspot.com/2008/12/sweet-ava.html I am beyond grateful for the opportunity to attend. Pamela

  19. Wow! Sounds stunning…. Great job!!!

    Regards,
    SBL Graphics

  20. chad moore says:

    so great of you to chat with us via Dane Sanders FastTrack Coaching calls – you were very inspiring!! thank you thank you!

  21. Liza says:

    Wow, those are some amazing images! Great job ladies!

  22. Nicki says:

    Thank you, Me Ra, for your kind words. I cannot even begin to tell you how amazing that weekend in Chicago was for me. I came back a different person and I am so grateful I had the chance to be there. It was so great to see everyone’s images again. That is definitely an amazing group of women and I feel blessed to have been a part of it.

  23. Genie says:

    LOL! Oh Gretchen, I had no idea the hoops you were continuing to jump! Beautiful, touching shots, every one of them. What a fascinating challenge and yes, I would have thought….what’s up with THESE two?” I also loved having a Dad as model too!

  24. denise karis says:

    wooow! These are all amazing! The two that really stuck out were the side by side black and whites by Tara and Roma – SO BEAUTIFUL!!!

  25. tracie says:

    i’m tsj, i’m tsj!! {thank you pamela for the kind words too}. me ra, this came at a perfect time for me … what great memories … thank you!

    i’m so happy to hear the joy and sigh of relief that i sense in your in your posts. God has put you in my thoughts before your first post a few weeks back, and i continue to pray.

    i look forward to taking another workshop someday, until then … we have your posts! 🙂

  26. Kathleen says:

    I’m so impressed with everyone’s work! And thank you, MeRa for the kind words. This was the first time I had ever shot in anything other than P mode. I spent last week with a group of friends and devoted much of the weekend to shooting pictures of my friends babies in manual (!!). I can’t believe the leaps and bounds my photography has made since I walked into the Fine Arts building that weekend and I owe it all to you and Brian.

  27. […] of all the piano images that were submitted b/c they remind me of the baby’s feet images from yesterday’s post. So many of you sent piano images, and each one was different in perspective. Each image was well […]

  28. […] Ra has posted about our lighting conditions during our workshop. Please wander over there to see the amazing photos from all the women who were […]

  29. Anne Reuter says:

    wonderful pictures.. hope i will make it to one of your workshops someday!

  30. […] Is it time to come back to Chicago?  See what the Chicago ladies captured and experienced by CLICKING HERE! […]

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