Picking the best viewpoint. |
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![]() Hints and tips by Philip Grosset If you'd like to submit photos for criticism, click here. |
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| This site is a revised edition of one previously called Take Better Photos. Its aim is to help the beginner. Please use my GUESTBOOK to let me know what you think of it! | ||||||||||||||||
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| Here, on the left, is a very unsuccessful photo! The cameraman had snapped away without positioning himself where he could see his subjects properly. Contrast this with the two pictures below: | ||||||||||||||||
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These photos of the same scene are much more successful because I had:
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| So, once you've decided exactly why you want to take a photo, the next job is to search around for the very best position from which to take it: |
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| Here, I knew what I wanted to photograph: the peacock. But is this really the best view I could have got of it? You can't see its tail, and the peacock doesn't stand out from the background. Compare it with the picture below .... |
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| ....where I had selected a better angle to show off the the tail, and had waited until there was a background that contrasted with it. As always, it's a matter of deciding what most interests you in a scene, then making sure that you show it really clearly. Please move on to the NEXT PAGE. |
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NEXT PAGE PICKING THE BEST VIEWPOINT |
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