Originally a still-life art form, boudoir photography switched to human subjects when clothiers stopped making apple-size garter belts. Bite the fruits of seduction this Valentine's Day with today's Groupon.
The Deal
$145 for a boudoir photo-shoot package (a $295 value), which includes:
- One-hour photo shoot
- One 8"x10" print
- One retouched image transferred to a CD
- Two outfit changes
$205 for a boudoir photo-shoot package (a $450 value), which includes:
- One-hour photo shoot
- Two 8"x10" prints
- One retouched image transferred to a CD
- Three outfit changes
Though photographer Krzystyna Harber specializes in vintage-style imagery, her 60-minute boudoir photo shoots capture modern, sultry portraiture. Each private session reflects the client's personality, whether through wide shots of the model's lingerie-clad figure, or close-ups of her derriere, décolletage, or left elbow. Subjects should finesse their hairstyle and camera pout prior to the shoot and bring outfits from home. After the session wraps up, subjects meet Harber a second time to collect one or two 8"x10" prints of choice as well as one retouched digital image.
Vintage Girl Studios
After capturing the photography bug at the historic Ferranti-Dege, Krzystyna Harber honed her skills and founded Vintage Girl Studios. Specializing in old-timey imagery, Harber creates traditional pinup prints that evoke famous, flirty portraits of yesteryear's starlets and Coke bottles. Each private photo shoot, whether vintage-themed or boudoir, takes place in an intimate, sunlit studio with hardwood flooring. Professional makeup artists and hairstylists spruce up pouts and coifs, helping women feel beautiful and confident in front of the camera's winking eye. A selection of packages allows subjects to commemorate their sessions with prints, digital files, or novelties inscribed with a sensual image.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Writing an Urban Legend
Everyone secretly wants to believe in scary stories that might be true. Indulge your friends' gullibility with these tips to crafting the perfect urban legend:
• Make sure the story takes place somewhere nearby, on a similar night—ideally exactly 100 years ago to the night. Or on the devil’s birthday.
• Always include an animal that turns out to be a different animal or an animal where one does not belong—like a dog that is actually a rat, or an alligator in the bathroom of the Museum of Alligator Safety.
• Tweak the details—it's only a few letters’ difference to change "gardener" to "murderer," and only a small white lie to change "was valued by the community" to "possessed double hook hands and a thirst for marrow."
• Always carry "proof"—this can be a monster's tooth carved from soap, a faded newspaper article created in Photoshop, or a scrap of the victim's clothing that is actually just a scrap of clothing you ripped off a terrified hiker you chased through the woods.
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