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Models. Anyone here photograph them?

Gingerbread Demon

Yelling at the Vorlons
Premium Member
Models are fun.

Anyone here photograph them?

Not the plastic model model but the kind with two legs and a two arms?

Got any model horror stories?
 

Just wondering. I have a few stories. I'd say 99% of the time I have good experiences and meet nice models but it's that other 1% I find entertaining. I mean how many times can your grandmother die so you can't turn up for a shoot?
 
By reducing people to their jobs and reinforcing cliches?
In fairness, we've had pretty much this exact topic but with people in customer service or waitstaff (and numerous other jobs). I get that there's some added potential for posters to delve into sexist or cliche territory given the nature of the job and that so few have experienced it, but Coco appears to work in the industry and his question came off as fairly innocuous to me; just looking for other stories from people working in the field.

To future posters in the thread: Please be respectful.
 
I understand your point, certainly bitching about customer service seems the bread and butter of some threads here. But I think they are "what annoys you" threads and don't target specific jobs. I think if a "waiters.." thread popped up it would get some flack.

But point taken, plenty of it going on so have at it :)
 
Instead of just complaints about dealing with models, why not open it up and make it a general discussion about stories (good or bad) from people who have worked in or around the modelling industry, either in front of or behind the camera? I know we have at least a few people here who have, though it's up to them if they want to talk about it.
 
I only have experience with non-professional "models", i.e., classmates in my photography class where we pose for each other. So, I have no idea if this counts, but I remember a few times that shootings took more than twice the time needed because the "models" could not stop laughing.
 
That depends. I find when a model is spontaneous and laughing, even if it's not part of conversation while shooting I might try and grab a shot in that moment. Usually that doesn't work as planned but sometimes you catch something special.
 
I take pictures of models all the time. They don't know that they're models or that I'm taking pictures of them but it gets me out of the house and away from my decomposing father.
 
Just wondering. I have a few stories. I'd say 99% of the time I have good experiences and meet nice models but it's that other 1% I find entertaining. I mean how many times can your grandmother die so you can't turn up for a shoot?

I work part-time as a model on the side and I have worked with many photographers (fashion, beauty, lifestyle mostly). I also do TFP shoots where both sides just get new photos for their portfolios and nobody is paid any money. It's a fun creative endeavor and often more rewarding than a paid job.

99% of the time I have good experiences and meet nice photographers but it's that other 1% I find scary.
You know, photographers who are trying to hit on you, photographers who get really pissed off and insulting when you tell them you don't want to work with them. No matter how polite and friendly you are there will always be the occasional jerk.
Men just don't take rejection well I think. :p

Add to that the stories I've heard from other models about photographers trying to touch them (or worse). That's something that hasn't happened to me, thank god.

I guess the bottom line is: No matter how many stories photographers can tell about models... they're not remotely as nasty as the ones we can tell. :p
 
I work part-time as a model on the side and I have worked with many photographers (fashion, beauty, lifestyle mostly). I also do TFP shoots where both sides just get new photos for their portfolios and nobody is paid any money. It's a fun creative endeavor and often more rewarding than a paid job.

99% of the time I have good experiences and meet nice photographers but it's that other 1% I find scary.
You know, photographers who are trying to hit on you, photographers who get really pissed off and insulting when you tell them you don't want to work with them. No matter how polite and friendly you are there will always be the occasional jerk.
Men just don't take rejection well I think. :p

Add to that the stories I've heard from other models about photographers trying to touch them (or worse). That's something that hasn't happened to me, thank god.

I guess the bottom line is: No matter how many stories photographers can tell about models... they're not remotely as nasty as the ones we can tell. :p



I don't doubt that for a moment.

I was just wondering if there are any others here doing this kind of thing.

I've never done TFP if you don't count shoots from friends who do it as a favour. I guess that makes me not very good at what I do, but I do it for myself and for a hobby so I tend not to fuss.
 
3-4 years ago I was branching out into different fields of amateur photography and did volunteer to do shoots for people I knew in the local area. Normally it would be a group event in town, going to their performance when I could schedule it around work, let them use it for promotional pages online.

I haven't done that in years but I'd like to have the chane again someday.
 
Got any model horror stories?
I've read quite a few from the model's point-of-view; some of them can be pretty bad. The following is a portion of an interview, excerpted from something I read recently (and not one of the worst, by far):

Brendan Francis Newnam: Well, to support your compulsion to sketch, you’ve done many things. You briefly went to college before dropping out to focus on simply being an artist. But to support yourself, you did what you call, “the naked girl business.”

You were a nude model for artists, for people you call “GWCs” — which are guys with cameras that would place ads on craigslist. At one point you say it was money that drove you into the naked girl business, but you also wanted to test yourself. What did you want to test?

Molly Crabapple: I think I wanted to burn off the innocence of childhood. I wanted to get rid of that limiting idea that a lot of girls have that the most important thing about us is our unscathedness by the world.

Because it’s very limiting. It’s like, if you constantly live expecting for the world to be this big, scary rape trap, you can’t go out, or travel, or have adventures or do all sorts of things. You can’t live as a free and equal person. While we should all work for a world where no one is in fear of violence, by the same token, sometimes the fear of violence itself is used as a chain against women.

Brendan Francis Newnam: You talk a lot about this. Not only were you on a very popular website posing nude, but you also did burlesque shows and other things. And throughout this part of the book, though, aside from a few creepy guys, it doesn’t really come off as super-tawdry or super-frightening.

Do you think you’re lucky, or is the world of sex work, as you describe it, not as exploitative and crippling to the ego as maybe people think?

Molly Crabapple: I mean, everyone has a very, very different experience, and I can only speak for my own experience. I had, definitely, photographers that got off on telling me horrible things about my body. I definitely had photographers where I was scared at shoots, though I certainly was lucky enough that nothing happened to me.

But listen, we live in a country where one out of five American women experiences sexual assault. It’s just a dangerous country for women. Most of those assaults come from women’s friends, acquaintances, loved ones, partners, and men that they’re dating. So, I think all sorts of worlds can be good and bad. All sorts of jobs in capitalism can be exploitative sometimes and things that you enjoy other times. Sometimes both at the same moment. My God!

But for me, no, it was not the worst thing on earth. It’s actually something I’m always very glad I did because I met the women who would always be my muses. These tough, smart, sharp, independent women.
 
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