Photo Shoot!
Posted: Sat Feb 26, 2005 12:46 pm
Thelma looks like she'll do alright so far. Tuck's initial impression seems to have been right after all.
Depending on what aspects you are refering to it may be relevant that, at a certain level, drawing and photography are very much alike in many ways. Chose your angle, pick your pose, get the light direction(s) and intensit(-y/-ies) right, color balances, all are part of both to one degree or another.UncleMonty wrote:The photographer seems to know his/her stuff, anyway.
This was very well depicted. I'd guess Ralph has at least talked with a professional photgrapher at some time, or maybe has some experience himself. Whatever and however, he caught the moment perfectly. I only wonder how much time passed between the second and third panel.
That, sir, is an understatement.LoneWolf23k wrote:Yowza! ...She photographs nicely...
Well, yes. Hmmm... I was referring to the photographer's ability to talk to Thelma in such a way as to get a good pose without her knowing quite what he's doing. An artist has absolute control over his characters, but a photographer does not. She was already embarrassed, blushing, and naturally looking (and facing) downward, so it was natural and predictable that she'd turn her head toward the camera and turn her eyes upward while still facing down - thus getting a very fetching shot.DracoDei wrote:Depending on what aspects you are refering to it may be relevant that, at a certain level, drawing and photography are very much alike in many ways. Chose your angle, pick your pose, get the light direction(s) and intensit(-y/-ies) right, color balances, all are part of both to one degree or another.UncleMonty wrote:The photographer seems to know his/her stuff, anyway.
This was very well depicted. I'd guess Ralph has at least talked with a professional photgrapher at some time, or maybe has some experience himself. Whatever and however, he caught the moment perfectly. I only wonder how much time passed between the second and third panel.
She does look like she swallowed a bad fly, doesn't she? Oh, well. She'll get over it. (Can she bring herself to show happiness for Thelma in public, or will she have to do the 'my friend is happy' celebrating in private?)I think I cracked a rib laughing at Hortense's expression when Thelma swarmed Tuck.
At what "speed" it looks like she's telling Tuck the news, think about a 33 1/3 rpm vinyl played at 45 except without the pitch change!TGIF wrote:I would love to get the full text of what Thelma was saying in the third panel.
She sure is excited!
TGIF
I think Hortense is just a bitter woman who once had a bad experience evidently pushed on her by her parents. This would explain her reaction to Tuck's plan. Now, not only does she loathe the aspect of anything to do with showcasing feminine beauty whether mammalian or reptilian,("the degradation of it all") she'd rather eat ground glass than express ANY pleasure that Thelma "made the cut".Bootlizard wrote:She does look like she swallowed a bad fly, doesn't she? Oh, well. She'll get over it. (Can she bring herself to show happiness for Thelma in public, or will she have to do the 'my friend is happy' celebrating in private?)
In public, at any rate. Because of course she can't admit to anyone that a woman could be happy being told she was beautiful. (Someone oughta try it on Hortense, pity there aren't any eligible lizard men in the area.)she'd rather eat ground glass than express ANY pleasure that Thelma "made the cut".
One line was "Maybe I'll even be offered a contract with that big teen modeling company." That tells us that Thelma is probably at least 18, since her parents (apparently) didn't have to sign for her to enter the model search, and she almost certainly couldn't be older than 19 to be hired by a teen modeling company.I would love to get the full text of what Thelma was saying in the third panel.
No, you're quite correct. Originally trained as a commercial photographer, then a photojournalist, I had my share of portrait/fashion shoots. Working within the constraints of the comic format, Ralph did exceptionally well in illustrating how a skilled photographer can transform a shy model into a relative 'knockout'.UncleMonty wrote:
Well, yes. Hmmm... I was referring to the photographer's ability to talk to Thelma in such a way as to get a good pose without her knowing quite what he's doing. An artist has absolute control over his characters, but a photographer does not. She was already embarrassed, blushing, and naturally looking (and facing) downward, so it was natural and predictable that she'd turn her head toward the camera and turn her eyes upward while still facing down - thus getting a very fetching shot.
That's how I saw it anyway. Maybe I'm wrong. I work with video guys, not still-photographers.
More likely a 33 1/3 record played at 78...Sharuuk wrote:
At what "speed" it looks like she's telling Tuck the news, think about a 33 1/3 rpm vinyl played at 45 except without the pitch change!![]()
Shaaruuk
But wouldn't it be interesting if the photographer turned out to be reptilian (yes, some really ARE cold-blooded!), and that he caught Hortense's eye...and she his---Bootlizard wrote:In public, at any rate. Because of course she can't admit to anyone that a woman could be happy being told she was beautiful. (Someone oughta try it on Hortense, pity there aren't any eligible lizard men in the area.)she'd rather eat ground glass than express ANY pleasure that Thelma "made the cut".
But I'm sure in her heart she's happy that her friend is happy-- and didn't get ripped apart like she herself did. Good luck having her admit it!
Jim Lane wrote:More likely a 33 1/3 record played at 78......on speed---