What do you do when you are stuck in a cluttered, ugly or distracting photo location for a lifestyle portrait session?

Maybe it’s the only space you can photograph your bride and groom in a running-out-of-time fragment of the wedding day. Or, perhaps you can’t change angles because you’ll lose your perfect light. Maybe it’s an in-home family session, and the home is just, well, “lived in.”

Whatever the reason, here are three quick strategies you can use to still capture beautiful photos.

Screen out a distracting background with a prismatic filter

I love my Fractal Filters, not only for the cool lighting effects I can achieve but because they make a really handy screen. Piles of chairs, agricultural equipment, you name it: With careful positioning, you can block out whatever you want.

Use a long lens and as wide an aperture as you can, and move the filter around until you like what you see. You can get the original Fractal Filters here or there is a Nisha variation available here.

wedding couple in trees with distracting edges
I shot this photo on a working farm, so I used the filters to tone down the ugly fence.

Shoot tight on your subjects

Oldest trick in the book, maybe, but it works! Shoot tight and crop out whatever’s not working. Done!

wedding couple with no distracting elements
This photo was taken in a tiny corner of a fluorescent-bright surf club, next to a towering pile of plastic chairs. I lit the bride and groom with an off-camera flash and exposed to catch the glow of the interesting light fixture overhead.

Turn it black and white to help remove distracting elements

This works really well when the background is filled with brightly colored clutter. Household stuff, brightly painted walls, construction workers, traffic cones, street signs, parked cars … whatever it is, turning off the color focuses the eye back onto what matters: Your subjects.

Bonus tip: If all else fails, Photoshop is your friend

If you can’t get it right in camera, remove it in post. Editing out an offending background is a reliable last resort — albeit a time-consuming one.

I took the below photos in a front garden, and the light and greenery were beautiful. But there were two huge, brightly colored rubbish bins — and a speedboat — in the background every time I shot into the sun. I had no choice but to clone them out — I couldn’t change the angle because I would have lost the light effect I was trying to achieve.

.mgl-tiles { display: none; } #mgl-gallery-63690e3b61022 { margin: -5px; width: calc(100% + 10px); } #mgl-gallery-63690e3b61022 .mgl-box { padding: 5px; } @media screen and (max-width: 768px) { #mgl-gallery-63690e3b61022 { margin: -5px; width: calc(100% + 10px); } #mgl-gallery-63690e3b61022 .mgl-box { padding: 5px; } } @media screen and (max-width: 460px) { #mgl-gallery-63690e3b61022 { margin: -5px; width: calc(100% + 10px); } #mgl-gallery-63690e3b61022 .mgl-box { padding: 5px; } }

When it comes down to it, your subject and the moment are what really matters. If it’s the only shot you can get, then don’t worry if the background isn’t perfect. The memory is what matters!

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