How to Improve Framing Score in BModel
BModel data-driven playbook. Use this with your audit report for faster iteration.
Framing score reflects compositional discipline, not only camera quality.
Your BModel Snapshot
From report token 1dea079f41091b2ea39558edcf0f780e9c711e235471acc1959b08e73c4af6ac (Audit #31).
Global: 72.1
Status: Agency-ready
Best Fit: ecommerce
Global Score: 72.1
Priority Fixes from Your Report
- Refine your three-quarter pose by experimenting with subtle shifts in weight and hand placement to add dimension.
- Work on facial expression variety—introduce more emotion or softness to increase visual engagement.
- Adjust exposure slightly to avoid overly bright highlights that can flatten facial features.
- Incorporate more dynamic lighting setups to add depth and mood to your shots.
- Explore more diverse wardrobe choices to showcase range and versatility.
Keep Doing
- Maintain your strong framing—your placement in the frame is balanced and intentional.
- Continue using clean, distraction-free backgrounds that keep the focus on you.
- Keep your contrast levels high; it adds a polished, editorial finish to your images.
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
- Shoot full-body, three-quarter, and headshot in the same session.
- Center subject intentionally before pressing shutter.
- Keep consistent headroom and avoid accidental crop compression.
- Use posture cues (chest open, neck lengthened, shoulders set).
- Retake weak pose types instead of only polishing the strongest one.
Common Mistakes
- Repeating same pose family across all photos.
- Tilting camera to compensate for posture issues.
- Under-occupancy where subject reads too small.
- Keeping dynamic poses that break garment readability.
7-Day Improvement Protocol
- Day 1: pre-build shot order (headshot, three-quarter, full-body).
- Day 2-3: execute two rounds with camera height variations.
- Day 4: remove repeated pose patterns and keep one best per type.
- Day 5: micro-correct framing and posture in quick retake.
- Day 6-7: re-audit and check pose/framing deltas.
FAQ
- Why framing low despite good camera?
Framing score is composition discipline, not sensor quality.
- Main framing fix?
Center alignment + controlled headroom.
- Should I crop later?
Minor crop is fine, but original framing should already be intentional.
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