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Nashville commercial photographer Tausha Dickinson shares behind-the-scenes shoots, studio lighting education, headshot tips, and business strategy for photographers and clients in Franklin, Brentwood, and Middle Tennessee.

Brett Boyer Foundation’s Red Bird Games Hosted by Luke and Caroline Bryan: The Portrait Experience
Creative, Celebrity, Charity, Behind The Scenes Tausha Dickinson Creative, Celebrity, Charity, Behind The Scenes Tausha Dickinson

Brett Boyer Foundation’s Red Bird Games Hosted by Luke and Caroline Bryan: The Portrait Experience

The Red Bird Games Portrait Experience was a creative, fun-filled event in support of the Brett Boyer Foundation. Teaming up with Amanda Deese, we transformed Luke Bryan's property into a space cowboy-themed studio, complete with an Airstream, fog, and gel lighting. Guests embraced the theme, bringing personality and excitement to each shot, making this year's Red Bird Games truly unforgettable.

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • Place a single key light at a 45-degree angle, slightly above eye level, angled down toward the subject. This creates natural shadow and dimension without additional gear. A softbox or umbrella adds softness and control.

  • A headshot is a single polished portrait for LinkedIn or professional profiles. A branding session is a broader shoot that captures your personality, environment, and story across multiple images for use across your website, social media, and marketing.

  • Nashville headshot pricing typically ranges from $150 for a mini session to $1,500 or more for a full personal branding session. Investment depends on session length, number of final images, and whether hair and makeup is included.

  • It should be recent, well lit, show your face filling 60 to 70 percent of the frame, and reflect your current career level. Avoid car selfies, group photo crops, harsh overhead lighting, and heavy filters.

  • Confidence in front of the camera comes from direction, not personality. A skilled photographer guides your posture, expression, and movement so the result looks natural even if you felt awkward the whole time.

  • One quality strobe, a softbox or umbrella, and a clean background are enough to create professional studio portraits. Lighting knowledge matters far more than the number of lights or the cost of your kit.

  • Look for a commercial photographer with a portfolio that includes brand, advertising, or editorial work. Review their approach to art direction and subject guidance alongside their technical skills.

  • A CRM automates client communication, contracts, invoices, and follow-ups. For photographers, tools like Dubsado reduce admin time and create a consistent client experience from first inquiry to final