
Direct eye contact can be as engaging in a picture as it is in real life. When taking a picture of someone, hold the camera at the person's eye level to unleash the power of those magnetic gazes and mesmerizing smiles. For children, that means stooping to their level. And your subject need not always stare at the camera. All by itself that eye level angle will create a personal and inviting feeling that pulls you into the picture.
2-Use a plain background
A plain background shows off the subject you are photographing. When you
look through the camera viewfinder, force yourself to study the area
surrounding your subject. Make sure no poles grow from the head of your
favorite niece and that no cars seem to dangle from her ears.
3-Move in close
Take a step or two closer before
taking the picture and zoom in on your subject. Your goal is to fill the
picture area with the subject you are photographing. Up close you can
reveal telling details, like a sprinkle of freckles or an arched
eyebrow.
4-Center your Frame
Center-stage is a great place for a performer to be. However, the
middle of your picture is not the best place for your subject. Bring
your picture to life by simply moving your subject away from the middle
of your picture. Start by playing tick-tack-toe with subject position.
Imagine a tick-tack-toe grid in your viewfinder. Now place your
important subject
at one of the intersections of lines.You'll need to lock the focus if you
have an auto-focus camera because
most of them focus on whatever is in the center of the viewfinder.
5-Lock the Focus
If your subject is not in the center of the picture, you need to
lock the focus to create a sharp picture. Most auto-focus cameras focus
on whatever is in the center of the picture. But to improve pictures,
you will often want to move the subject away from the center of the
picture. If you don't want a blurred picture, you'll need to first lock
the focus with the subject in the middle and then recompose the picture
so the subject is away from the middle.
Usually you can
lock the focus in three steps. First, center the subject and press and
hold the shutter button halfway down. Second, reposition your camera
(while still holding the shutter button) so the subject is away from the
center. And third, finish by pressing the shutter button all the way
down to take the picture.
6-Watch the light
Next to the subject, the most important part of every picture is
the light. It affects the appearance of everything you photograph. On a
great-grandmother, bright sunlight from the side can enhance wrinkles.
But the soft light of a cloudy day can subdue those same wrinkles.
Don't like the light on your subject? Then move yourself or your
subject. For landscapes, try to take pictures early or late in the day
when the light is orangish and rakes across the land.
very Nice Mr. Khawar Naqvi :)
ReplyDeletevery Nice Mr. Khawar Naqvi :)
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