Headroom and Centering: Practical Framing Rules

BModel data-driven playbook. Use this with your audit report for faster iteration.

Headroom consistency makes a set look editorially controlled.

Your BModel Snapshot

From report token 5bd80a180e18e82c4b9850820f5930b39d95707345fc39736e009825b002e52a (Audit #77).

Global: 71.1 Status: Agency-ready Best Fit: editorial

Global Score: 71.1

Priority Fixes from Your Report

  1. Use longer posture and camera angle adjustments to create a more elongated line.
  2. Center the subject and keep consistent headroom.
  3. Increase sharpness by using steady camera and good light.
  4. Refine silhouette line with stronger posture and clearer garment shape.
  5. Relax shoulders and lengthen the torso to create cleaner body geometry.

Keep Doing

Why This Metric Matters

Framing and pose structure decide whether agencies can read body line, expression intent, and outfit silhouette quickly.

How BModel Measures It

BModel tracks pose-type coverage, missing pose classes, framing alignment, headroom balance, and body geometry signals.

Fix It Now: 5 Actions

  1. Shoot full-body, three-quarter, and headshot in the same session.
  2. Center subject intentionally before pressing shutter.
  3. Keep consistent headroom and avoid accidental crop compression.
  4. Use posture cues (chest open, neck lengthened, shoulders set).
  5. Retake weak pose types instead of only polishing the strongest one.

Common Mistakes

7-Day Improvement Protocol

  1. Day 1: pre-build shot order (headshot, three-quarter, full-body).
  2. Day 2-3: execute two rounds with camera height variations.
  3. Day 4: remove repeated pose patterns and keep one best per type.
  4. Day 5: micro-correct framing and posture in quick retake.
  5. Day 6-7: re-audit and check pose/framing deltas.

FAQ

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