Join me as I show you how you can RESET your habits and stop over shooting today, in RESET: Overshooting!
It's better to be GOOD than LUCKY! A lot of photographers feel that they have to get a TON of shots in order to be sure that they got the ONE that they were hoping for. THAT is not the best approach though. When you are confident in your abilities and vision, you learn that LESS is MORE. You don't need to get a bunch of versions of the same image in order to get the RIGHT image. You just have to shoot with intention and understand how to get the shot that you want. There's no need to spend hours culling your images just to pull out that one perfect shot. There's no need to have exhausting sessions that last for hours. You can STOP all of that, and get the images you want for your client without wasting their time and yours! No more overshooting! Join me as I show you how you can RESET your habits and stop over shooting today, in RESET: Overshooting!
This was meant for me! I always overshoot and then I DREAD editing the images because there are too many to pick from and it takes too long !
I can't believe I waited this long to actually watch this one! So many aha moments!
I had doubts that a few videos could help me change my mindset as an overshooter............. I was wrong! First Newborn shoot after finishing this series, only 110 shots in a 2 hour session, normally I would be at 300ish! Thank you Meg! Amazing!
I hesitated purchasing this one (not because I didn't want it), but because I bought so many others this weekend, and I didn't think that overshooting was too big of a problem for me. After watching this, I realized that overshooting for me was not paying attention to the small details, not waiting for the right shot, and not having confidence in myself as a photographer. I am so excited for my next shoot so I can practice not overshooting! This will save me so much time during shoots and during post process. This workshop is a MUST for anyone who takes more than a couple of photos per pose/set up, or for those of us who already know we overshoot. LOVED this!
Fantastic! I mainly shoot wildlife rather than portraits, and come home with way too many of the same shot "in case the bird flies off" and dread the culling process. Now to try to control my urge to snap frantically and slow down, only shooting when the bird is active or the head is in the right position. It is not really possible to "pose" wildlife so I must slow down and take advantage of the opportunity when it happens rather than "spraying and praying". I have learned heaps. Thank you so much.
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