Tuesday, March 3, 2009
10 Advanced Photo Tips
Posted by John Lane in "Digital Home Articles & Resources" @ 06:00 AM
"There is a fine line between a photo that is quite nice and one that is quite breathtaking. At some unknown point, a photo can cross the Rubicon and be forever a piece of beautiful art. That hinterland between a regular photo and evocative art is a shifting area from person to person and taste to taste. However, that zone can be narrowed a bit once you start to consider the way the brain stores memories and emotions."
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This article discusses the artistic process in creating remarkable photos and has stunning photos as examples. However, the best 10 tips I ever received were from an old boy scout magazine:
Boy Scout's Magazine, Rules to taking good pictures
- Keep it simple. Shoot only what is important to the image.
- Get close.
- Get rock steady.
- Light it. If photographing a person, use the flash whether indoors or outdoors.
- Keep it natural. No forced poses.
- Rule of thirds. Divide the picture in a 3x3 grid. Put your subject at the intersection of two lines, not the very center.
- Keep your background clean. No light poles out of the subject's head.
- Golden hour. Shoot during the beautiful golden hour after sunrise and before sunset.
- Move around. Move in, out and all around your shots. Don't shoot from the same angle.
- Frame your subject. Use trees, rocks, etc. to add visual interest to your subject.












