Putting a lot of time in one single portrait can be rewarding. Something like this! I really enjoy working on my photographs after I finished a project and do my own edit on it. This is the CEO of a company I had to work for yesterday, and really, this guy is awesome. A good boss in my opinion, very understanding. No sense of dictatorship, his employees seem to get along quite well with each other and the atmosphere was relaxing, still, they were all focused on getting the job done. After starting his company two years ago, he now has 8 employees and more coming in. How about that! That's impressive.
Today I finished editing the photographs and send them to the company through WhatsApp to get an approval and to see if there were any adjustments needed to be done. I wanted to make sure everybody I took a photograph of, was satisfied and would love to use it on their LinkedIn. While this edit took some time, the other photographs take me about 20-25 minutes each to sync them all together and make them unite. I wish it would be easier to achieve these kinds of results in that same amount of time, so it would be affordable for my clients to pay for these edits, but the thing is: because you have so much control over specific edits and adjustments that you're applying, it takes it up a notch to create one united identity when you're working with more than one image. I consider this more as a fine-art piece. What do you think? Click on the image to see the full resolution.
Yeah yeah, I know, there is always room for improvement. But not at 3.30 AM. Time to end Beats & Process and share the results with you all, hope you enjoyed.
Cheers,
Ruben