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Tips and tricks learnt by an underwater model on a two week shoot in the Maldives. Check out the article and more photos in The Underwater Kingdom blog
There is a lot more to being a good underwater model that just being there. There are some good points made in the article, although most of the photographers I've modeled for don't like wild hair, and prefer I use a hood. They also don't like bubbles, which makes judicious buoyancy control a must.
One of the very few books on underwater modeling is "The complete guide to underwater modeling" by Tom Mount. You can find it new and used on the book web sites.
You get to see just how good looking and what a good diver Patty was and still is from back in the day.
Tom, is just like Keith Richards, he has always looks that way.
A professional photographer once told me that he found it easier to teach a model to dive than to teach a diver to model, so there is certainly some skill involved. These pictures tend to confirm my suspicion, though, that the most difficult skill to master is looking good in a bikini, followed by the somewhat less imposing task of looking good in a wetsuit, both of which the model managed quite nicely. Of course, like any difficult skill, breaking it down into smaller pieces makes it more manageable. In this case, for example, the aspiring model might opt first to be tall, then thin, then have shapely legs and derriere, followed by an appealing visage. That way you don't have to tackle the task all at once.
Actually, no, it didn't. Please don't interpret that as a slight upon your model, who would probably look lovely if she were posed to look comfortable, if she didn't have water in her fogged mask and red eyes, if the backscatter was edited out, etc. (By the way, if you size your photos to be less than ~700 pixels wide they will be more easily viewed in most browser windows without scrolling.)
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