7 Basic Rules For A Correct Photography

7 Basic Rules For A Correct Photography

Photo: Jonas Svidras @ STEP.CAMERA

It is sad to invest money in a good SLR camera and not be able to get more than unsuccessful, ugly and disastrous photos, one after another, due to naive oversights about basic rules of photography, rules that every photographer, no matter how beginner, should know. Today I bring you a series of tips and basic rules of photography with which you can take correct pictures of those that satisfy the eye ?From there, make them spectacular will depend only on you.

Basic rules for a correct photograph
1) This rule is very simple but it has tremendous power in the way we visualize the photo. It consists of dividing the image, mentally, in 9 equal parts (by means of 2 horizontal parallel lines and other 2 vertical lines) and then placing the subject at some point of intersection of the lines. This picture illustrates it perfectly:

As you can see, the photographer has placed the bird at the intersection point of the lower left part of the frame. Any other point of intersection would have been equally valid.
This in photography is called strengths. They are points that attract attention and give the subject more interest and prominence.

2) The Law of the Horizon
Useful when photographing landscapes. When you are composing a photo, before shooting, imagine 2 parallel horizontal lines dividing the photo into 3 equal parts. This is applicable in both horizontal and vertical modes.

If what you want to have special interest is the sky, locate the horizon on the bottom line. If on the contrary you want to give greater importance to the terrestrial landscape, place the horizon in the second line, the superior one.

It’s that simple

3) Explore new angles
Experience photography by shooting with your camera from daring and unusual angles. For example, take a picture of yourself in the rearview mirror of the car (only when you are not the driver, please) or capture the image of a historic building reflected in a puddle of water.

4) Come without fear to the subjects
Use the Macro function of your camera (in automatic mode you can identify it with a flower symbol, and in SLR cameras using a Macro lens) and take close-up photos of small objects. Capture details You could even focus exclusively on the detail by ignoring the rest of the object. The results are usually very striking.

5) Adopt the height of your small subjects of age
To achieve magnificent photos of children, squat or kneel, try to lower and place the camera at the same height as the child or animal you want to photograph, and transmit more realism.

6) Use the flash on the outside
For portraits, use the flash on the outside. Although it makes a particularly sunny day, the flash helps prevent the areas of shade that occupy the face of the person by wearing eg hat or something that casts shade or because the sun is on or behind the person photographed. The best thing to avoid in forcing the flash. It is called fill flash, and its purpose is not to illuminate the darkness, but to fill the face of the subject with light so that it is uniform with what surrounds it.

and the golden advice ..

7) Always shoot in RAW
Make all your photos in RAW. This format preserves all the elements of the photo (colors, light, shadows, saturation) and allows, by means of a subsequent processing, to move them at our whim. Making a photo in JPG produces a final photo in which we would not have more room for modification. (More on the advantages and disadvantages of shooting in RAW, here ).

No Comments

Post A Comment