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Yearbook Publishing
~ How To...
~ ~ Advertising
~ ~ Camera
Ready
~ ~ Captions
~ ~ Color pages
~ ~ Copy
~ ~ Cover Designs
~ ~ Digital Camera
~ ~ Divider
pages
~ ~ Endsheets
~ ~ Grade
10 Writeups
~ ~ Headlines
~ ~ Interviewing
~ ~ Job
Assignments
~ ~ Layout
~ ~ PageMaker
~ ~ Photography
~ ~ QuikPic
~ ~ Scanning
~ ~ Sections
~ ~ Signatures
~ ~ Terminology
~ ~ Theme
~ ~ Title
page
~ ~ Typography
~ Exercise 1
~ Exercise 2
~ Exercise 3
~ Exercise 4
~ Exercise 5
~ Exercise 6
~ Exercise 7
~ Exercise 8
~ Exercise 9
~ Exercise 10
~ Exercise 11
~ Exercise 12
~ Exercise 13
~ Exercise 14
~ Exercise 15
~ Exercise 16
~ Exercise 17
~ Exercise 18
~ Exercise 19
~ Exercise 20
~ Home ~ |
How
To ~ Take photos
Photographers must be creative, self motivated, and
confident. Somebody who isn't afraid to get right in the middle of the action to get that
shot. Remember it is the photographer that takes the picture not the camera. The
photographer sets the camera, and composes the shot, the camera just records the light.
| Photo Composition |
Photos must have something to
say
- it must have visual interest. It must pique hte viewer's curiosity enough to want to
read the caption to find out more about it.
- Be ready for anything
- spontaneous moments make priceless pictures. Arrange a single center of interest
with all attention drawn toward that center. Don't let eyes look towards the camera.
Stay close/fill the frame
- generally, the closer you get the better the photo. Getting closer eliminates
distracting and unnecassary backgrounds and shows the subject more clearly.
- Get people active
- photograph people while they are busy. The pictures will have a feeling of lively
spontaneity. Take action photos when the action is coming towards you.
Don't cut off appendages
- watch out for feet or hands at the edge of the frame, or deliberately focus in on the
face. Hands and faces are the most expressive and interesting parts of the body.
Patterns
- repeating patterns attract a viewer's eye, but something that breaks that pattern really
focuses attention on that break.
Angle
not all photos should be taken standing up staring
into the camera. Experiment with interesting high and low angles. Taking a photo of
someone from a low angle makes the person appear taller. The photographer should try to be
at the subjects eye-level.
- Backgrounds affect your photo
simple backgrounds focuses attention on the subject
and makes a stronger statement. Make sure the background doesn't change the focus of the
photo - such as a telephone pole appearing to grow out of the top of someones head.
- Foreground add depth
scenic shots can be framed with foreground elements.
Foreground elements add a sense of distance, depth, and dimension.
- Look for Good Lighting
lighting can make a great picture a yawner. Good
lighting can make pictures more interesting, colorful, dimensional, and flattering to the
subject. Strong sunlight is a wonderful source of good lighting, gymnasium flourescent
lighting can be a challenge.
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Rule of thirds
imagine a tic tac toe board in your viewfinder.
Locate the main subject off-center, usually at one of the intersections of the lines.
Leave space for the subject to move into to imply action.
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- Use your flash
to impove poor lighting, but can cast shadows on the
background if the subject is close to a bank of lockers, for instance. Indoors it freezes
motion , but only within the flash range of about 12 feet (4m). Outdoors a flash can
soften shadows and brighten colors.
- Hold the camera steady
the most basic rule is the most often overlooked.
Holding the camera steady is vital for sharp, clear pictures. Press the shutter button
with gentle pressure, don't jab it.
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