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Photographs of Claudia

Page 10

by KG MacGregor


  I’m not ready.” She twisted the rod to tighten it and locked the

  leg supports into place. Then she attached a reflector umbrella, a

  light softener she needed for the day’s second photo.

  The more she thought about the workshop, the more certain

  she was Maria was right. Now was the time to take her skills to

  the next level. Most studio professionals were using LCD light

  meters and integrated strobes that flashed from their tripods,

  but she was still using her analog Sekonic meter and continuous

  lighting. It wasn’t just the technology that was leaving her behind.

  Ordinary portraiture had become fine art, with the cutting edge

  photographers mixing ratios for multiple fill lights and creating

  color and texture effects she had never imagined. Her father had

  kept current through seminars and workshops, but she no longer

  had the benefit of his training.

  A car door slammed outside and she hurriedly peeked around

  the blackout shade. “There she is, Maddie.”

  She started backward down the ladder, giving her makeshift

  studio one last glance. With all the preparations in place, her

  excitement about competing for the workshop was growing at a

  fever pitch. This portfolio would be her best work ever.

  Claudia grinned broadly through the screen door. She wore a

  long blue turtleneck over a black leotard and gray leggings. “I’m

  here for my close-up, Miss Westcott.”

  “Come on in. I meant to leave the door open but I got

  sidetracked upstairs. I have everything ready.”

  “Great T-shirt,” she said.

  Leo tugged the hem downward to display her design, the

  UC-Santa Cruz mascot. “I thought you’d appreciate my Banana

  Slug. You want something to drink?”

  “Better not. You’ll get me perfectly posed and I’ll have to

  pee.”“Good point, but I’m more worried about things going wrong

  on my end, like when the camera jams or the lights go dead.” She

  led Claudia into the downstairs studio and gestured toward the

  stylist chair. “Hope you don’t mind a little pancake. You can wash

  0

  it off before you leave.”

  “I already put makeup on,” she protested. “I’ve hardly been

  outside since July, and I’d look like a ghost without it.”

  Leo looked closely at her eyes, which were lined with brown

  pencil and dusted with a soft taupe shadow. It was subtle, just the

  right amount to highlight her natural features. “Your eyes look

  fantastic, but I need to polish your cheekbones and flatten your

  forehead a little more.”

  “Excuse me?”

  She chuckled at Claudia’s feigned offense. “Makeup’s good

  for covering up blemishes and blending in the skin tone but

  we need a little texture too so you won’t look like you’ve been

  airbrushed. But first”—she spun the chair around to face the

  mirror and handed her a clip—“I’d like to see your hair up. It’s

  gorgeous the way it is, but I think we’ll get more contrast from

  the contours of your neck, especially with the low lights.”

  “What does that mean?”

  Leo looked around the studio and found a black flag she

  used to create shadows. Holding it up behind Claudia’s head,

  she asked, “See how the edges of your hair get lost against this

  background? If we pull it up”—she swept it upward—“the light

  skin of your neck makes a clear line. That’s going to make it easier

  to achieve the different effects I need in these photos. I’d leave it

  down if we were using a light background because it would have

  the opposite effect.”

  “I get it.” Claudia deftly spun her hair into a twist and clipped

  it in place.

  “That’s lovely.” Striking, actually. With that simple sweep

  Claudia went from a girl next door to an elegant ingénue. Taken

  aback by the transformation, Leo suddenly realized she had been

  staring.

  “Something wrong?”

  She shook off her lapse in concentration along with Claudia’s

  question. “No, let me just…” She brushed powder onto Claudia’s

  forehead, then took a cotton puff and gently swabbed both

  cheeks. “I think that does it, but I’ll take this stuff with us just in

  case. You ready?”

  “Let’s find out.”

  They wound up through the house to the attic, where Leo

  held out a hand to help Claudia off the ladder. She was pleased to

  see the wide-eyed reaction to her improvised studio. She hadn’t

  realized until just that moment how important Claudia’s approval

  was. “I’ve been busy.”

  “I’ll say. Look at all of this.”

  When she pulled the chain to turn off the light above the

  stairs, the tidy set came clearly into view. A small lamp on the

  floor illuminated Miss Murphy, who was positioned before a

  black backdrop and side wall. The camera and light stands were

  silhouetted in the foreground.

  “It’s so dark.”

  “It won’t be once we get started, but I’ll keep the studio lights

  off until we need them because it gets hot up here in a hurry.”

  She picked up Miss Murphy and set her off to one side. “The first

  two shots are as simple as it gets—one hard light, one soft light.

  Same pose if we can get it.”

  “Since I don’t know what you’re talking about, I’ll just try to

  do whatever you tell me.”

  “First I’ll set one of my studio lights a few feet back and shine

  it directly onto your face from the side so it casts shadows. That’s

  hard light. But most of my studio portraits are soft light, which

  means I bring the spots closer and bounce them off something

  else to spread the light around. When I light both sides of the

  face it cuts down on the shadows. Normally I use more light on

  one side than I do on the other, or maybe I’ll shine it from the top

  or bottom. What I’m trying to do is highlight certain features.”

  “That makes sense, but why would anyone ever want to use

  hard light?”

  “It’s more dramatic. Remember me talking about Maria’s

  exhibit, the one with all the elderly people? She used hard lighting

  to emphasize their wrinkles. Every line looked as if it had been

  chiseled by a sculptor. Very vivid.”

  “Great, so you’re going to highlight my wrinkles.”

  Leo rolled her eyes. “You’re twenty-two years old. You don’t

  have wrinkles. But what I want to do is try to cast a perfect

  shadow on one side of your face with the first photo, and then

  erase most of the shadow on the second by moving the light back

  and adding a fill light. This is an exercise in technique. I’m not

  trying to capture anything candid or personal, so when we take

  this I’d like you to show as little expression as possible. All I want

  to do is demonstrate that I understand the concepts of hard light

  and soft light.”

  Claudia shrugged. “I’m ready. Except that Miss Murphy is

  still wearing my shirt.”

  “These are just head shots, so I left a few tube tops over there

  in the changing r
oom.” She pointed to the opposite corner where

  she had hung a curtain diagonally. “They’re all black. Just pick

  the one that fits best. Would you mind taking your jewelry off

  too? You can leave the ring. I won’t be showing your hand.”

  “Help me with this.” Claudia turned her back and pulled her

  collar from her neck, exposing the chain of the jade pendant.

  “This is pretty.”

  “Burmese jade. I bought it when I was in Bangkok.”

  “I would have guessed it was a gift from Mike.”

  “Pfft. If Mike had picked it out, it would be as big as a cowbell.

  He isn’t much on ceremony, but he likes to make a splash.”

  Necklace in hand, Claudia disappeared behind the curtain to

  change.

  Leo turned on the studio lights and oscillating fan, and busied

  herself with making sure her extension cords were secure. There

  was only one power outlet in the attic but it was enough for her

  immediate needs.

  “This one fits as long as I don’t sneeze.”

  She tried not to stare as Claudia walked into the light. The

  leotard and tube top drew a perfect outline of her petite figure,

  accentuated by pronounced collarbones that would cast elegant

  shadows across her chest. She forced herself to concentrate on

  the task at hand, setting the mannequin aside and scooting an

  adjustable stool into its place. “Hop up here and I’ll get to work

  on the lights. It’s going to get warm in a hurry, but this should

  only take a few minutes.”

  That proved to be an understatement, as the temptation

  to capture a Rembrandt triangle on Claudia’s cheek proved

  irresistible. Perspiration rolled down her back as she made

  countless adjustments to the camera, the light and to Claudia,

  who patiently endured her quest for perfection.

  “I get embarrassed about this ring sometimes. I didn’t want a

  diamond this big, but Mike didn’t want anyone thinking he was

  cheap.”

  “It’s very beautiful.”

  “Yes, it is. But since I’m the one wearing it, I wish it said more

  about me than him. I don’t care what the people in his office

  think of it.”

  Finally, Leo got the angle she wanted. She turned off the

  fan to still the strands of hair and stepped onto a wooden box

  to look down into her viewfinder, where Claudia’s upside down

  image was centered inside the frame. Her expression was one of

  slight annoyance, probably because she was still thinking about

  her too-flashy ring.

  “Now look directly at the Banana Slug and empty your

  mind of everything.” She drew a deep breath and exhaled slowly,

  snapping off two photos. “Perfect. Now try not to move.”

  “My nose itches.”

  “Think about what you’re going to order at Isabella’s when

  we get finished.” She adjusted the aperture higher then lower,

  taking four more shots to bracket what she thought would be the

  perfect exposure. “That was great, but I need you to sit still for

  just another minute.” She swung the umbrella into place with its

  fill light and held her meter to the cheek that had been shadowed.

  After eight minor adjustments she got the ratio she wanted and

  stepped back onto her box. “I want six more shots just like the

  last ones. Look at Mr. Banana Slug.”

  Claudia stared back at her chest, her expression vacant.

  Again, she clicked off two photos, adjusted the aperture

  twice, and clicked again. “That should do it. I don’t think we

  could have started off with two more perfect shots. I can’t wait

  to see them.”

  “Me neither.” Claudia immediately held up her hand.

  “Except I know you’re not going to show them to me until we’re

  all done.”

  “Just trust me. If they aren’t fantastic, we’ll shoot them

  again.”

  “That’s a deal. Now let’s get out of this oven.”

  Chapter 13

  “…and our dog bit my brother right on the nose.” Katie

  Theroux, standing at the front of the classroom, turned the page

  of her journal and continued, “We had to get rid of the dog, but

  I wanted to get rid of my brother instead.”

  Claudia stifled a laugh, thinking she couldn’t wait to share

  that story with her family and friends. The escapades of her

  third-graders, told through their weekly entries in a journal, gave

  her valuable insight into their personalities and the support they

  received at home. “Okay, we have time for one more. Who wants

  to go next?”

  A dozen hands shot up and she zeroed in on a boy who rarely

  volunteered. As he finished his reading, Sandy entered the room,

  clearly bursting with news. “What’s up next? I’ll get them started

  while you go talk to Larry,” she whispered with a mischievous

  grin.

  Larry Hirsch was their principal, and Claudia couldn’t

  imagine why he would want to talk to her. “What about?”

  “Just go.”

  “Orbiting the sun. Page forty-one.” She handed over her

  lesson plan book and the teacher’s science text. “I’ll be right

  back,” she told her class.

  Walking down the deserted hallway, she chuckled nervously

  to recall the ominous feeling from her childhood when she had

  been sent to the principal’s office. At least Sandy had been excited

  about this, whatever it was.

  “Miss Galloway.” The school secretary looked up over half-

  glasses and smiled. “Let me tell Mr. Hirsch you’re here.”

  She waited nervously until she was directed to enter the

  paneled office, where Larry acknowledged her with a nod as he

  finished his call. A man of about forty, he was slightly overweight

  and balding. Pictures of his two sons, one of whom was in

  Claudia’s class, stood in frames on the bookcase behind him, and

  it crossed her mind that Leo had likely taken those photos.

  When he hung up, he jumped to his feet and rubbed his

  hands together as though preparing for a feast. “So how do you

  like teaching, Claudia?” he bellowed.

  “What’s not to like at a place like Melrose?”

  “Lucky, aren’t we? Smart kids, active parents, dedicated

  faculty…and the best cafeteria on the whole peninsula”—he

  patted his stomach—“as you can see. Anyway, that’s neither here

  nor there. You know Joan Palmer?”

  “Yes, of course. She teaches fourth grade out in the portable

  classroom.” Sandy had made certain she knew everyone on the

  staff. “That’s right. She was in here this morning. Said her husband

  was getting transferred to New Jersey. You interested in teaching

  fourth grade next fall?”

  Claudia was floored by the question. First-year teachers

  seldom won coveted assignments at schools like Melrose. “Are

  you kidding? I’d love it.”

  “Hold on, there’s a catch. I can’t promise anything now

  because we have to advertise the opening and interview all the

  applicants. But it usually comes down to my recommendation

  and I’d love to get a little new blood in here. Sandy tells me

 
you’re getting a lot out of her students.”

  “I certainly can’t take the credit for that. Miss Irwin did a

  super job getting her students ready to learn.”

  Her head was racing ahead to what might happen if his

  tentative offer actually came through. If she took a job in Monterey

  next year while Mike finished up his work in Taiwan, she would

  have a year’s experience under her belt when she moved back to

  Cambria. They could even set a firm wedding date for the end of

  the school year.

  “Sounds like you two make a great team,” he said. “I’d love to

  have you on board.”

  “Absolutely. I love it here.”

  “Excellent. If you need something to do between now and

  then, you might consider going down to the district office and

  signing up as a substitute.” He came around his desk to grasp her

  hand in both of his, beaming with satisfaction at their new pact.

  “I bet I could keep you busy until summer.”

  She walked out stunned, both thrilled at the opportunity and

  overwhelmed at what she would need to do over the summer to

  get up to speed on fourth grade curriculum. Now that she had

  made friends, it would be fun to stay another year in Monterey,

  and Mike would probably be relieved that she had something to

  keep her busy while he finished his project overseas.

  Most photographers got their biggest thrill in the darkroom

  upon seeing the image for the first time, but not Leo. She didn’t

  allow for such excitement until the final print. As far as she was

  concerned, everything before that was merely an extension of

  the studio process. According to the application guidelines, the

  additional lab steps—things like toning, burning and dodging—

  were moot, since post-development enhancements were

  prohibited. They expected her to get the lighting right the first

  time.

  Her lips turned upward in a satisfied smile as she rinsed the

  last of the soft light images. Not only had she captured exactly

  the light she wanted in her very first shot, the minute differences

  in Claudia’s pose rendered this one better than the others. In

  particular, her eyes were wider, such that a barely perceptible

  crease appeared above her eyebrows, a subtle sign she hadn’t

  emptied her mind of her annoyance with Mike over the ring

 

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