The day of the shoot:
Laura was the art director for this photo shoot, as she birthed the concept and provided the attire and props. I just showed up and tried to get creative with where and how to pose. She was shooting with gothic in mind, and my primary thought was escapees from an insane asylum.
Here's a test shot where I stood to gauge subject position and composition:
I was scattered that morning, as I forgot to put on deodorant, bring a hair brush, hair tie, and my remote. Fortunately, Laura had it together and saved the day.
I felt trepidation about getting my feet dirty and exposed to who knows what, but I knew this was for the sake of art. Keeping our hair ratted out was challenging, due to the humidity, so in between takes, we’d have to rat it back up again and again.
We were also wary of how the ballooning gowns would work on our small frames, as this dictated which shots we liked (the ones that didn’t make us look enormous).
Although we planned the shoot months ahead, we were pleasantly surprised to find we chose a day the facility was having a Halloween event. Hence onlookers, including costumed children, weren’t alarmed by our production, but instead enjoyed our "show". One parent even requested a picture taken with his child - so sweet.
Post processing:
Aside from wanting to create a night scene, I had no idea how to process this. I began by switching Laura’s head from another picture, as I preferred the ratted hair and facial expression from that shot than the one in this shot.
It wasn’t until I started experimenting that it started to come together, but even then, I underwent so many rough drafts. At one time, I inserted a full moon, starry skies and a bobcat, not all in the same draft, but then separately decided to omit them.
As stated early, I started with replacing Laura’s head with one from another shot
I added DOF, by blurring out the background of trees, and added lighting so the raven would stand out.
I lightened our skin using both the dodge tool and luminosity brush. I darkened our eyes and lips with the burning tool, so our features wouldn’t be washed out.
For lighting, I went into renderings and used spotlight. Additionally, I added moonlight rays with the gradient tool and feathering.
The hue was changed in Saturation/Hues. I only wish I kept record of the numerical setting, as I'd love to duplicate the hue.
For textures, I used tree bark and handwriting.
I bolded the hues for the dead flowers, so they would stand out.
Lastly, I cloned out the writing that ran across Laura's forehead
Outtakes and Rough Draft/phototype:
Here are a couple of out takes that I cropped so you could really appreciate Laura's expressions, LOL! So HILARIOUS!
Here’s one discarded prototype:
If you haven't already, you need to check out Laura's shot from this shoot. You won't be disappointed!