I've been adding to and removing from the gallery a bit now so not sure which ones you have/haven't seen.
In studio conditions it's relatively easy to take a "good" photograph - I'm sure anyone in the club could have come away with the same photos in my shoes. However, the situation here is that the shoot wasn't under my complete control and even that was intentional. Interacting with the model and setting up studio lighting in a similar way to the strobist stuff I did last year,was the real reason to go, especially the interaction. Sometimes I get a bit bored of macro/landscapes/ stuffthat doesn't require a bit of thought or stretch me. Working with others/pushing myself was the name of the game
It was, initially, a bit stressful I must admit.
So though the plain background isn't exciting it's also not distracting and that led me onto the second goal - how to process these to get results that belie the simple studio setup and move them away from being straight up record shots. That's not to say having vanilla background photos like this would harm the portfolio but I did want some variety. Maybe even some that were "appealing or interesting"
Once I'm completely comfortable directing a model and working the lighting to achieve the look I want then it all comes down to my imagination and the story I want to tell. That's the real challenge and what sets the good photographers apart but I don't get there by hiring models, MUAs and set dressers until I know exactly what I am doing. Even if I had that confidence and ability, it wouldn't have changed what was available in the studio for setting the scene.
I'm not sure it counts as glamour or boudoir though, I looked up the definitions and it doesn't seem to match
. Art nude is may something for the future but beyond simple "bodyscapes" that too will need more experience