When I was working on pictures with my father, there were a couple leading ladies to whom I wish I'd expressed how I felt rather than being too cool or too shy.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My mother's a... beautiful woman, and I think, in some way, I felt intimidated by that sometimes.
The problem is I'm not a good photographer. To be perfectly honest, I'm too shy. Not aggressive enough. Well, I'm not aggressive at all. I just loved to see wonderfully dressed women, and I still do. That's all there is to it.
As a little girl, I was always shy, but in front of the camera I wasn't.
I was mild-mannered, wore glasses, was very shy with women.
I grew up around lots of men - my father, my brothers, my uncles - so I wasn't intimidated by them.
I was never considered cool throughout my teens: a very important time to be accepted by someone, especially your peers. Yes, I had all the screaming women, but the guys hated my guts.
From an early age, my father stressed the power of the image, and he encouraged me to carefully control my own. He advised me, for example, never to be photographed from below, an often unflattering angle for women.
I think a lot of my shyness and non-athleticism came because I didn't have a father to instill those in me.
When I first began, the technicians, camera and makeup men made me feel so self-conscious that I began to have the biggest inferiority complex about my looks.
I work with really cool people, and so far I haven't been approached in any embarrassing manner when it comes to image.