Connecting with your subject in portrait photography
Great portraits are about connection not just technique. Here's how to make your subject feel seen and comfortable in front of the camera.
Connecting with your subject in portrait photography
Great portraits are about connection not just technique. Here's how to make your subject feel seen and comfortable in front of the camera.
Written in by Leila Fernandez
Great portraits are about connection not just technique. Here's how to make your subject feel seen and comfortable in front of the camera.
Portrait photography isn’t just about aperture and lighting — it’s about trust. To capture something meaningful, you need more than a sharp lens. You need a human connection.
Talk. Joke. Ask questions. Let your subject get used to you before the camera even comes out. The more relaxed they feel, the more natural your photos will be.
Most people aren’t models. Give light, encouraging direction rather than overwhelming instructions. Focus on mood and emotion rather than exact poses.
The eyes tell the story. Whether it’s joy, tension, vulnerability, or confidence — make sure your composition draws the viewer into them.
Window light is magic. So is golden hour. Natural light tends to make people feel more at ease, and it often flatters skin tones beautifully.
The real gold is often in the seconds before or after a pose. Keep shooting when they adjust their hair, exhale, or laugh at something.
Portraits are a collaboration — not just a picture of someone, but a moment with them. When your subject feels safe and seen, the camera disappears. That’s when the good stuff happens.