Kevin Lohka had a great idea for a back-to-school-themed photo shoot, so he borrowed a school bus and got to work. I’ll let him explain more below. — Lori Lori Allen Director, Great Escape Publishing ****************** September 30, 2010 The Right Way to Travel ****************** HOW TO BORROW A SCHOOL BUS, AND OTHER STOCK PHOTO TIPS By Kevin Lohka in Calgary, Canada It was about 10 days before the end of the school year in June, and I started to think about creating some “back-to-school” images for my stock portfolio. I figured that back-to-school would be a high-demand theme, come July and August. Since my son Joshua is the last kid off the bus, I asked his driver if one day he could spare 15 minutes at the end of his route. I wanted to take a few pictures of Joshua in front of our house, using the bus as a giant prop. The driver said he’d be happy to help out and we agreed to take the pictures on the last day of school. Thinking ahead, I prepared a clean set of clothes for my son to change into after getting home from school. I also came up with a shoot list to have ideas of the images I wanted at-hand. When the bus pulled up, however, Joshua had paint all over his face from his last-day-of-school activities. Since I’d already asked the bus driver (a complete stranger) for a favor and didn’t want to waste his time, I quickly got Joshua cleaned up, had him change into his modeling clothes, and started the shoot. But when I started taking the planned photos of Joshua leaving our front door and walking to the bus, I couldn’t get the exposure right. Our front porch was in heavy shade and the bus was in bright sunlight. Tick, tick, tick… I started to feel pressure. Seeing that my planned shots weren’t going to work, I decided to walk around the bus to get some inspiration. That’s when I saw the bus stop sign. Bus safety might make a good theme, I thought. So I asked the driver to activate the stop sign and brought Joshua to the front of the bus to make it look like he was crossing the street. I positioned him to block the view of the driver so that I wouldn’t need to worry about a second model release. I took a total of 84 pictures during the shoot, and chose five for submission to iStock, Shutterstock, and Dreamstime. This is one of my favorites from the day: 
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