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Stop chasing the masses...

Wednesday, July 15, 2020 | By: Bev Walden

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Be Unique

Ask yourself, "What is possible for me?" and not, "What is everybody else doing?"

In today's environment, you must distinguish yourself. 

We got the first glimpse of the power of being unique when we developed our Relationship Black and White portrait line years ago. At that point, in our studio, we were all things to all people. No style, no consistency and failure as a studio. However, as our Relationship style matured, it took on a life of its own and formed the foundation for our success. It makes up 60% or more of our sessions and the public still embraces it with gusto. Why? It is very distinct, narrow, focused, emotional, authentic and it appeals to the masses. These characteristics are what form any successful style. 

Relationship portraits were "different" in a sea of "sameness."

Here are 8 UNIQUE things we determined when we first started with Relationships several years ago and why they succeeded. We decided to either sink or swim, but never compromise these parameters.

1. They were always in black and white when the rest of the photography world was in color. We took a huge risk. While many photographers were coming out of the darkroom, we decided to go back in! Color photography was just becoming overwhelmingly popular and we decided to do this style ONLY in black and white. 

2. It was named Relationship Portraiture...who had ever heard of naming a style at that time? Nobody! But the name has carried this style beautifully over the years.

3. It was more about capturing the moment and body language and less about rigid poses. It was all about the client's story, not about a camera smile or nice pose with eveyone looking into the camera.

4. It had a strong emotional pull by showing moms, dads, babies and children interacting with each other, snuggling, kissing, hugging. 

5. The composition was much closer and all about the faces as opposed to "pictorial" portraiture that made the subjects very small.

6. We allowed ourselves the freedom to crop into subjects' heads, sometimes cropping entire heads off! Whoa! Is that ok to do??? Answer-YES, when appropriate.

7. They were dramatic and stark. Simple and dark. The lighting highlighted the main subjects while shadowing the secondary subjects. We closed the eyes of those in shadow to add to the emotional impact.

8. We only offered it AS FINE ART BLACK AND WHITE IMAGERY, ONE COLOR OF MAT, ALWAYS SQUARE,NO SEPIAS, LIMITED SIZES AND LIMITED AVAILABILITY and we included Certificates of Authenticity and registered each image.

In other words, as you can see from the 8 points made above, we created a distinctive style with attributes we could consistently do again and again and tight parameters. 

We never strayed from these and today, our Relationship portraiture is still much sought after and very successful.

If you are currently all things to all people, you have diluted yourself in the marketplace and that makes it harder for people to choose you unless you are the cheapest or the easiest to get to. 

 

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