Raise your hand if you want to take better photos!?! Raise your hand if you want to be able to do this all on your phone!?! Well, today is your day! I believe the best camera we have is the one in our hand - always!! Whether I am 40,000 feet in the air, professionally collaborating with creatives across the country, or right at home in Nashville, I love having all the tools necessary to capture “in the moment” behind the scenes moments right here on my iPhone. My go to favorite app I use on a weekly basis is A Color Story. Developed by my two dear friends, Elsie Larson and Emma Chapman, the founders of A Beautiful Mess, are not only soulful creatives but also inspiring leaders in the tech space! Side Note: Here’s to badass women doing impactful things and supporting each other along the way!! Back to the App - I love it for many reasons: First, the tool options are comprehensive that even includes perspective warp adjustments. Second, I love the vast and fun filter options to quickly hone in on a specific aesthetic goal and lastly, I adore the selective edit tool. The selective edit tool launched a few years ago and this is what confirmed my loyalty to the app. This specific tool allows you to edit isolated parts of the photo without touching the rest of the image which is great for dodging and burning. To show you how I most commonly use the app, I took over A Color Story Instagram account to give you a step-by-step approach of how I produce images on the go. Have fun watching the video below and sending you all so much love!!
AR Photography
The Washington Post | Alyssa Rosenheck's Tips for Photographing Your Home
The Home: it’s our safe haven from the world, a place to dream, to grow , to love, to rest and certainly, create. My camera gives me admission into homes all over the country. I sense the homes filled with love, filled with time honored stories and a soulful patina. But most of all, I feel honor and gratitude to document the sacred spaces of others. I enjoyed sharing my tips with the Washington Post for Photographing your home. Whether you want to simply capture a space that is both the source and a byproduct of your inspiration OR you have more concrete goals in mind–listing your home, sharing your design work, finding a tenant–you have a foundation for success here. Below are my favorites tips and to read my full conversation; head over to the The Washington Post.
ONE | Level Up - It is a quick rookie mistake when one thinks hand holding the camera is going to yield super star results. Invest in a simple tripod for your dslr or an attachment for your camera phone. Straight lines are the oxygen to an image, when capturing straight horizontal and vertical lines, the image, the composition, the components within the image will breathe and sing a chorus line to the viewer but when the lines are off, your eye immediately catches this and the crooked lines become a focal point and misses the mark. Hence, the need to level up and have a tripod.
TWO | Lens - First, set an intention through your own personal and emotional lens. Each room has an energy and story to tell. The four walls of our home and creative spaces are where we love, find inspiration and grow (hello #TheNewSouthern) and what a cool privilege it is to be the one holding the camera while communicating a story of these spaces that have supported you and many more to come. Second, invest in a good prime lens and wide angle lens. One of my favorite prime angle lenses is a 50 mm because this lens is most representative of what your natural eye sees. My goal as a photographer is to communicate a space inspiring stillness while also transporting you to what I am experiencing as I am in the space. Prime means having a fixed focal length, and shooting with a fixed lens also motivates you to move around the space and really focus on achieving the perfect frame for the shot. Wide angle lenses are important in capturing the scale of a space. I encourage you to rent as many as you would like and play around with what feels most natural to you without distorting the image. If you are using a phone, there are really affordable wide angle lens accessories as well if you are on the go.
THREE | Let there be light - Natural light. I find it necessary for an image to be the most accurate representation of a room as possible.. It is camera vs. eye, and all cameras are not created equal when it comes to the vast dynamic range of our eye. I am known for bright and crisp images so it always surprises my clients and observers when we are starting to photograph the house and I am methodically flipping off all the light switches. Is it counter intuitive? Yes. But it yields the most natural look of the color of the room and all the beautiful things within it. Natural light also forces you to adapt to what you are given while understanding all exposure options. The only way to know what works for you is to practice during different times of the day while studying the way light moves from room to room. For me, this is a form or prayer and poetry.
FOUR | Be a Straight Shooter - I am a back to basics kind of gal in every area of my life especially when it comes to angles behind the lens. Let’s keep things simple and shoot straight on. This will yield beautiful clean lines and communicate the simple geometry of the space. Over complicated angles and postions result in fussy images and confused focal points.
Photo + Styling: ©Alyssa Rosenheck for Luxe Magazine Design: Amanda Barnes Interiors
FIVE | Layer - an image is technically flat but what makes it come to life with great dimension are its layers. The rooms you are shooting need to communicate a stillness or an emotion to the viewer. There needs to be an element of visual texture to the space for it to have dimension. Ways to do this are decorative tabletop accessories, layered sculptures/artwork leaning against a wall, layered rugs to draw the eye in, incorporating texture through throws and fabric selections, and fresh flowers picked from the garden. Leave the red roses at the store and stay within a neutral color palette such as whites, greens, and blushes. This color palette will keep an image fresh and attainable without it being season specific.
Photo + Styling: ©Alyssa Rosenheck for Mydomaine and Design: Allison Crawford
SIX | Composition - I find composition to be much more important than the camera you have in your hand. It enables the space’s story to be told through object arrangement and placement. I can communicate a particular point of interest through my focal point or can introduce a moment of relief by emphasizing negative space. There are numerous theories behind composition, but at a very basic level, your goal should always be to achieve straight lines, balanced layers and let the rule of 3rds guide your lens.
©Alyssa Rosenheck for Architectural Digest - Design: Alexis Bednyak + Searl Lamaster Howe
Luxe Magazine Spanish Revival Home Tour with Alyssa Rosenheck and Designer Amanda Barnes
Dear Spanish Revival,
I love you. Your painted tiles and terra-cotta accents are earthy and grounding to the eye. Your textured white walls create enough visual relief to satisfy my artist spirit while leaving warmth of an Old World charm. And!!! Seeing as how one of my dear friends, Amanda Barnes is the Queen of Spanish Revival - you seem to always bring us together for collaborations yielding beauty and joy! Remember the old saying, “Luck happens when preparation and opportunity meet?” - The images you see here are the result of 3 staging meetings, endless love into each detail and a full 13 hour day capturing the soul of this house. Let these images be a reminder to find stillness in your day and confidence that the process of hardwork and passion results in beauty and joy. To read more about this beautiful project, please pick up a copy of Luxe Magazine on newsstands today!!
Happy Day Sweet Souls!!! I am proud of you and sending you all so much love!
Allure Magazine Feature with Karen Elson Xx
The New Southern is dedicated to passionate humans who embrace their truth and use it as a platform to better communities and the world around them. I am committed to shining a light on these creative entrepreneurs, their processes, along with the four walls containing this synergistic infectious energy. Our stories are our power and every day is a new opportunity to use our truth to better the world around us.
Shooting for Allure magazine and working with their editorial staff is a definitely a highlight…. especially when they call me to contribute to an intimate bathroom series (Check out my last one here with Jen Auerbach). I am thrilled to share with you one of fashion’s icons, social activists, and singer songwriter, Karen Elson.
Bathrooms represent a fresh start or a therapeutic evening ritual… this is a place for stillness, pause…. a place for reconnection. Such intimate spaces share the inner-workings of a person's life and mentality. Are the countertops decorative? functional? barren? When I walked in Karen’s space there was a soulful and intentional story being told. I immediately connected to the saturation, the depth, the dotted gold details. This is collected at it’s finest and a whimsical reprieve. The design of this space is from the talented duo Pierce and Ward.
Thank you so much to Allure and Karen for welcoming me into this beautiful space! Make sure to grab a copy of Allure’s latest issue on stands NOW and have a look at the entire feature below! Xx