: High-shutter speed photography is essential to catch hair and clothing mid-air without blur.
When a model poses standing still, they control their face. When a model hits the apex of a bounce, just before the descent, their face enters a state physicists call "negative g-force." The cheeks pull back. The lips part involuntarily. The eyes widen in genuine shock or joy. It is the only time a supermodel looks authentically human. Photographers chase this "caught breath" moment—a vulnerability that retouching cannot fabricate. supermodels on trampolines
At first glance, putting a million-dollar face on a $200 piece of sports equipment seems risky. Models break ankles walking on flat floors; throwing them into the air seems like a liability nightmare. Yet, from a photographic standpoint, the trampoline is the perfect prop. : High-shutter speed photography is essential to catch
So, when did these two worlds collide?
: Ensure the trampoline is on level ground to avoid tipping or uneven bounces. The lips part involuntarily