Composition
Introduction
Have a Strong Center of
Interest
Use the Best Camera Angle
Move In Close
Use Lines for Interest
and Unity
Watch the background
Take Pictures Through Frames
Action Pictures
Action Pictures with
Telephoto Lenses
Introduction
Most good pictures are not the result of a fortunate accident! The photographs
you admire in exhibits may look like chance shots. But most often they
have been created by the photographer. How do you create a picture? First
you learn the rules of good composition given here. After you learn these
rules, you'll realize that most pictures with good composition are the
result of careful planning, patient waiting, or a quick sensing of the
best moment to take the picture. But it's easier than it sounds. You'll
find that the rules of composition will become part of your thinking when
you are looking for pictures, and soon they will become second nature to
you.
Photographic composition is simply the selection and arrangement of
subjects within the picture area. Some arrangements are made by placing
figures or objects in certain positions. Others are made by choosing a
point of view. Just moving your camera to a different position can drastically
alter the composition. For moving subjects you select the best camera position
and wait for the opportune moment to snap the picture when the subject
is in the best location for composition.
While the rules for good pictures are not fixed and unalterable, certain
principles of composition will help you prevent making serious mistakes
in subject arrangement and presentation.
After you've followed the rules of composition for a while, you'll no
longer need to spend much time trying to determine the best arrangement
of the picture you're taking. As we all have some artistic ability, soon
the recognition of pleasing composition will become almost automatic. You'll
be aware that it is important to place figures or objects in certain positions.
Figures should look into not out of the picture. Fast-moving objects should
have plenty of space in front of them to give the appearance of having
somewhere to go. And remember that since bright tones or colors attract
attention of the eye, the most important elements of the picture should
be the lightest or brightest or most colorful.
To remind you again: composition is simply the effective selection and
arrangement of your subject matter within the picture area. If you follow
the suggestions given here, experience will teach you a great deal about
this subject. When you look through the viewfinder, concentrate on how
you want the final picture to appear.
Have a
Strong Center of Interest
It is usually best to have one main point of interest because a picture
can tell only one story successfully. The principal subject may be one
object or several. For instance, you may want to include a secondary subject,
but make sure that it doesn't detract from your main subject. Whatever
the main subject is, always give it sufficient prominence in the photo
to make all other elements subordinate to it.
Avoid putting your center of interest in the center of your picture.
Usually, if the main subject is in the middle of the picture, it looks
static and uninteresting. You can often make excellent picture arrangements
that have pleasing composition by placing your center of interest in certain
positions according to the rule of thirds. When you divide a scene into
thirds both vertically and horizontally, the dividing lines intersect in
four places. Any of these four intersections provides a pleasing position
for your center of interest.
Use the Best Camera
Angle
Good pictures usually depend on selecting the proper point of view.
You may need to move your camera only a few inches or a few feet to change
the composition decidedly. When you want to photograph a subject, don't
just walk up to it and snap the shutter. Walk around and look at it from
all angles; then select the best camera angle for the picture.
Outdoors, shooting from a low camera angle provides an uncluttered sky
background. However, when the sky is overcast with cloud cover you'll want
to shoot from a high angle and keep most or all of the sky out of the picture.
Overcast skies look bleak and unappealing in pictures.
Always consider the horizon line. Avoid cutting your picture in half
by having the horizon in the middle of the picture. When you want to accent
spaciousness, keep the horizon low in the picture. This is especially appropriate
when you have some white, fluffy clouds against a blue sky. When you want
to suggest closeness, position the horizon high in your picture. Another
important point, easily overlooked, is to see that the horizon is level
in the viewfinder before you press the shutter release.
Move In Close
One rule of composition you should always keep in mind is whether the
picture you're about to take would be better if you move in closer to your
subject. Close-ups convey a feeling of intimacy to the viewer while long
shots provide a sense of distance and depth. A close-up picture focuses
your attention on the main subject and shows details that you could otherwise
overlook or defines details that are too small in more distant views.
Some amateur photographers look through the viewfinder when they're
taking pictures and start backing away from the subject. This is not only
bad from a safety standpoint, but it can also be bad for composition. This
can have the effect of making the subject too small in the photograph and
encompassing too many elements that are not part of the picture. Including
too much in the picture can be confusing and distracting to the viewer.
When you look through your viewfinder, move toward your subject until
you have eliminated everything that does not add to the picture. (Be sure
to read your camera manual to understand how close you can get to your
subject. Moving in too close may cause your pictures to be out of focus.)
Even though you can crop your picture later if you plan to enlarge it,
it's usually better to crop carefully when you take the picture. Carefully
composing the picture in the viewfinder is essential for taking color slides
because cropping techniques are not generally used with slides. In addition,
because the frame size of a 35mm camera is not large, you'll obtain the
highest quality when you utilize all of the picture area. The larger the
image size on the film and the less enlarging that's necessary, the higher
the image quality. A good rule to remember is to fill the frame.
Use Lines
for Interest and Unity
Use leading lines to direct attention into your pictures. Select a camera
angle where the natural or predominant lines of the scene will lead your
eyes into the picture and toward your main center of interest. You can
find a line such as a road or a shadow in almost anything. The road will
always be there, so it's just a matter of choosing the right camera angle
to make it run into the picture. A shadow, however, is an ever-changing
element in the scene. There may be only one time in the day when it's just
right. So you should patiently wait for the best composition.
Watch the background
The background can make or break a picture. It can add to the composition
and help set the mood of a picture, or it can detract from the subject
if it is cluttered. Watch out for backgrounds that are more compelling
than the subject. Cluttered, distracting backgrounds often spoil otherwise
good pictures. Before you snap the shutter, stop for a minute and look
at the background. Is there some obtrusive object or action in the background
that does not relate directly to your subject which would divert the viewer's
attention? For example, is there a telephone pole growing out of your subject's
head? Beware of an uncovered trellis or the side of a shingled house when
you take informal portraits or group shots, because prominent horizontal
or vertical lines detract from your subject. Foliage makes a better background.
A blue sky is an excellent background, particularly in color pictures.
Remember to look beyond your subject because your camera will!
Take Pictures
Through Frames
For an added creative dimension, compose your pictures with an interesting
foreground frame, such as a tree, a leafy branch, or a window. Try to choose
a frame that links thematically with the subject such as a sailboat's rigging
framing a harbor scene. Foreground frames create a sensation of depth and
direct the viewer's attention to the center of interest. Watch the depth
of field of your lens so that both the foreground and the other details
in the scene will be in focus. In scenic photos, avoid a very out-of-focus
foreground that can distract from the subject. But in other kinds of shots,
such as informal portraits, an unsharp foreground frame emphasizes the
main subject.
If you're using an auto-exposure camera, and you want both the foreground
frame and the main subject sharp, remember to use the aperture-priority
mode or depth program so that you can use a small aperture. Or you can
use this mode to set a large aperture to put the frame out of focus. If
you are using an auto-focus camera and you want only the main subject in
focus, be sure to lock in the focus for the most important subject area
first, and then include the out-of-focus foreground-otherwise the lens
will focus on the foreground.
Action Pictures
Pictures of subjects in action usually convey a feeling of excitement,
so the technique you use to photograph the action will have a great deal
to do with the quality and mood of your pictures.
The most common technique for stopping action in a photograph is to
use a high shutter speed. For most action pictures, you'll probably want
to use as high a shutter speed as lighting conditions and depth-of-field
requirements allow. Auto-exposure cameras that have an "action" program
mode are especially good for stopping action; they automatically choose
a fast shutter speed for the prevailing lighting conditions. Some auto-exposure
cameras automatically switch to an action mode when you mount a telephoto
lens (or telephoto zoom) on the camera. But even if you can use action
modes, it's useful to know when you must use the highest shutter speed
and when you can stop the action with slower speeds.
Action moving at right angles to the camera is more difficult to stop
than action moving diagonally, and action moving directly toward or away
from the camera is the easiest to stop. Also, distant action is easier
to stop than action close to the camera.
For example, suppose you were photographing the Grand Prix. You would
have to use your highest shutter speed to stop the action if you were photographing
the cars from the side as they raced across the finish line. If you were
near a bend in the track and could photograph the cars coming toward you,
you could get away with a slower shutter speed. Also, you could stop the
action with a slower speed if you were in the last row of the bleachers
rather than in the pits.
Certain types of action have a peak a split second when the action almost
stops. If you anticipate the peak of the action and begin pressing the
shutter release so that the shutter clicks right at the peak, the action
is easier to stop. A pole-vaulter at the top of his jump, a golfer at the
end of his follow-through and a tennis player at the peak of her backswing
are all examples of peaks of action.
Another good way to arrest action is to pan with a moving subject. If
you move the camera to keep the subject centered in the viewfinder as you
squeeze the shutter release, the subject will be sharp and the background
blurred. The slower the shutter speed, the more blurred the background
will be. This technique is useful for creating a feeling of speed in a
photograph. A picture of a trotter made at 1/500 second may show the action
frozen in a rather static-looking photograph. But if you reduce the shutter
speed to 1/125 second and pan the camera with the action, the result will
be an exciting photograph filled with the feeling of motion.
It's not difficult to track a moving subject with a manual-focus lens,
but an auto-focus camera that has a servo or continuous-focus mode makes
panning easier because the camera will do the focusing while you follow
the action in the viewfinder. The camera will continue to adjust focus
almost until the instant of exposure. The disadvantage of this mode is
that, unlike the single-shot focusing mode, the continuous-focus mode will
allow you to take a picture whether sharp focus has been achieved or not.
Why wouldn't the focus always be sharp? One reason is that a moving
subject may escape the focus target at the moment you press the shutter
release. Another reason is that although autofocus lenses respond in fractions
of a second, the subject may be moving faster than the focusing motor can
adjust focus. Finally, there is a lag between the time you press the shutter
and the time it takes for the camera to move the mirror out of the way
and expose the film. At least one camera is programmed to take this time
lag into consideration along with the speed and direction of the subject-and
adjust focus so that it is correct at the very instant of exposure.
Action
Pictures with Telephoto Lenses
Sometimes you'll want to photograph action that you can't get as close
to as you'd like, so you may use a telephoto lens to bring the action closer
to you. Remember that a telephoto lens not only increases image size but
also increases the effect of subject movement. When the subject distance
remains the same, the effect of subject movement increases in direct proportion
to the focal length of the lens. For example, if you need a shutter speed
of 1/250 second to stop the action with a 50mm lens, you'll have to use
a shutter speed that's twice as fast or 1/500 second with a 100mm lens.
The longer the focal length, the faster the shutter speed needs to be.
Back to photography tips main page.
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