Photography-People-and-Events
Photography Academy · Practical Guide
People and Events
Learn to create honest portraits, anticipate meaningful moments and tell the complete story of an event—while helping people feel comfortable in front of your camera.
Part 1 · People first
Strong people photography begins before you press the shutter
Your camera skills matter, but rapport, observation and timing are what turn a technically correct frame into a photograph that feels genuine.
Connect
Introduce yourself, explain what you are doing and ask permission where appropriate. A short conversation helps people relax and gives you clues about their personality.
Observe
Watch gestures, relationships, light and background activity. Anticipate laughter, greetings, reactions and quiet pauses instead of chasing moments after they happen.
Guide
Offer simple, positive directions: turn slightly towards the light, shift weight onto the back foot or interact with another person. Avoid over-posing every detail.
Part 2 · Visual storytelling
Build a sequence, not just one hero image
A useful event gallery combines context, people, atmosphere and details. Photograph each scene from several distances to give the final story rhythm.
Wide: establish the scene
Show the location, crowd, weather or decorations. A wide frame answers the viewer’s first question: “Where are we?”
Medium: show relationships
Photograph small groups and interactions. Look for conversation, teamwork, celebration and emotion between people.
Tight: reveal the details
Capture hands, expressions, food, awards, clothing, signage and meaningful objects that add texture to the story.
Part 3 · Technical starting points
Camera settings that keep you ready
These are starting points, not fixed rules. Check your exposure and sharpness regularly, then adapt to the light, subject movement and creative result you want.
Focus
Use continuous autofocus for movement and enable eye detection when it is reliable. For groups, place the focus point on a face near the front third of the group.
Shutter speed
Start around 1/250 second for relaxed movement and 1/500 second or faster for action. Raise ISO when necessary rather than accepting motion blur.
Aperture
Use a wide aperture for one person and a softer background. Stop down for groups so people at different distances remain sharp.
Quick reference
Suggested starting settings
Test before the important action begins. A five-second review at the start can prevent an entire sequence of soft or poorly exposed photographs.
| Situation | Shutter speed | Aperture | ISO | Helpful approach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outdoor portrait | 1/250 s or faster | f/2–f/4 | 100–400 | Use open shade or soft backlight and focus on the nearest eye. |
| Small group | 1/250 s or faster | f/4–f/8 | 200–1600 | Arrange faces on similar focal planes and take several frames. |
| Indoor event | 1/200–1/500 s | f/2–f/4 | 800–6400 | Use auto ISO with a sensible maximum and preserve the atmosphere. |
| Fast action | 1/1000 s or faster | f/2.8–f/5.6 | Auto ISO | Use burst mode selectively and continuous autofocus. |
Part 4 · Event workflow
A reliable plan from preparation to delivery
Preparation protects your creativity. When the practical details are under control, you can concentrate on people, light and decisive moments.
Clarify the brief
Confirm the schedule, venue rules, key people, must-have photographs, image usage, delivery date and who can approve changes.
Scout and prepare
Study the light, backgrounds and movement routes. Charge batteries, format cards, synchronise camera clocks and pack backup equipment.
Photograph the complete story
Work through wide, medium, tight, portrait and reaction frames. Watch the edges, protect highlights and vary your viewpoint without disrupting the event.
Back up immediately
Create at least two copies on separate storage before formatting any card. Keep one copy in a different physical location whenever possible.
Select and deliver consistently
Remove duplicates, test shots and unflattering expressions. Apply consistent colour and exposure, export to the agreed specifications and deliver securely.
Respect, consent and safety come first
Be especially careful when photographing children, vulnerable people, private events or culturally significant situations. Follow venue rules, seek informed permission when required and never publish an image simply because it was possible to take it.
For commercial or promotional use, obtain the appropriate written releases and confirm local privacy requirements before publishing.
Practical preparation
A simple, dependable event kit
Reliable equipment matters more than carrying everything you own. Pack light enough to move comfortably and include backups for anything that can stop the job.
Core equipment
- Camera body and, for important jobs, a backup body
- A versatile zoom or two complementary lenses
- Enough charged batteries and tested memory cards
- Lens cloth, rain protection and a comfortable strap
Before leaving home
- Confirm date, time, location and contact person
- Set file format, colour space and dual-card recording
- Check camera time and copyright information
- Review the shot list and weather forecast
Put it into practice
The five-frame people story
Photograph a safe, familiar activity such as a family meal, hobby session, community gathering or portrait walk. Ask permission first, then create:
- One wide establishing photograph
- One environmental portrait
- One natural interaction
- One close detail
- One closing photograph that gives the story an ending
Choose your strongest five images and arrange them in story order. Check whether the sequence makes sense without a written explanation.
