When photographing buildings, you will want to follow similar guidelines as you do when photographing landscapes. There are differences, though. The architectural character of a building translates well through its details, as opposed to the vista of a building. Additionally, interiors lend distinctive elements to composition and impression.
Instructions
- 1
Photograph a doorway for interesting composition. Details of a building can be as interesting, if not more so, than the building as a whole. Consider shooting a captivating doorknob and make it more so with composition, angles or lighting. A commonplace item can come to life like a sculpture.
2Photograph empty rooms of a house. Rooms without people or many belongings make stark comment on a world left behind. Without going to the extreme of emptying a room completely, at least get rid of clutter. Select a primary subject and don't let that subject get lost in too many secondary objects.
3Use caution when photographing people in buildings. In houses, people, even children, can look staged. Use distance and a long lens in an office building to capture people in a more natural state.
4Set time exposures to light interiors. Without people populating rooms, you can use the room's natural light or, if it's large enough, paint it with light, using a floodlamp in a reflector. Walk around the room, holding the lamp away from the camera at all times. Keep the camera shutter open and the film will only receive what the light reflects off of.
5Use geometric composition to create surrealistic impressions. Large buildings that wrangle for city space provide creative opportunities. Make photographic comments about city life, crowded spaces and the lines that emerge. Experiment with camera angles and light and shadow to show a new world within the mundane.
When photographing buildings, you will want to follow similar guidelines as you do when photographing landscapes. There are differences, though. The architectural character of a building translates well through its details, as opposed to the vista of a building. Additionally, interiors lend distinctive elements to composition and impression.
Instructions
- 1
Photograph a doorway for interesting composition. Details of a building can be as interesting, if not more so, than the building as a whole. Consider shooting a captivating doorknob and make it more so with composition, angles or lighting. A commonplace item can come to life like a sculpture.
2Photograph empty rooms of a house. Rooms without people or many belongings make stark comment on a world left behind. Without going to the extreme of emptying a room completely, at least get rid of clutter. Select a primary subject and don't let that subject get lost in too many secondary objects.
3Use caution when photographing people in buildings. In houses, people, even children, can look staged. Use distance and a long lens in an office building to capture people in a more natural state.
4Set time exposures to light interiors. Without people populating rooms, you can use the room's natural light or, if it's large enough, paint it with light, using a floodlamp in a reflector. Walk around the room, holding the lamp away from the camera at all times. Keep the camera shutter open and the film will only receive what the light reflects off of.
5Use geometric composition to create surrealistic impressions. Large buildings that wrangle for city space provide creative opportunities.
Enhance your photography skill,The Top Secret Photography Techniques
. Make photographic comments about city life, crowded spaces and the lines that emerge. Experiment with camera angles and light and shadow to show a new world within the mundane.Photo Tampering Throughout History - Image Authentication and ...
www.fourandsix.com/photo-tampering-historyThough photo manipulation has become more common in the age of digital cameras and image editing software, it actually dates back almost as far as the invention of ...
HOW TO videomapping.org - a blog for people interested in ...
videomapping.org/?page_id=42Even if she was using a good camera in picture number 2 and a wide angle one from her phone in picture number 1 the object is not matching the beamer lens throw.
Photo Pin : Free Photos for Bloggers via Creative Commons
photopin.comPhoto Pin is a free tool that helps bloggers and designers find beautiful photos for blogs and websites using Creative Commons licensing. Download the photos and get ...
Crestock.com Royalty-Free Stock Photos & Vector Illustrations
www.crestock.comCrestock offers high quality royalty-free stock photos, illustrations and vector images at low prices. Buy Pay & Go images from just $1 or save even more with an ...
News Photo Galleries Slideshows Pictures - Yahoo! News UK
uk.news.yahoo.com/photosView photo galleries and slideshows on Yahoo! News UK. View photos of the latest news stories from around the world.
Photos Capture Attention: PhotoDropper Makes it Easy
www.photodropper.com/photosWhy would you want to use a photo on your website or blog? Maybe you understand how humans respond to visual inputs and how photos can create an emotion instantaneously.
Photography and post-processing tutorials from beginner to ...
photo.tutsplus.comPhototuts+ is a community for Photographers and post-processors. Learn about lighting, exposure, workflows, photo critiquing, Adobe Lightroom and more
Photobucket.com The blog of Photobucket.com with all your photos ...
blog.photobucket.comPhotobucket.com The blog of Photobucket.com with all your photos & videos and everything you want to do with them.
Flickr photos or video with a Creative Commons Attribution License
www.flickr.com/creativecommons/by-2.0Explore / Creative Commons / (Or, browse popular tags) Here are the 100 most recent licensed bits and pieces: From Starr... From rayb777. From topol6
Graphic Design Inspiration, Blogs, Business & Career Advice HOW
www.howdesign.comFREE FEATURE DOWNLOAD Design PracticeGet this download of 6 exercises from David Sherwin's collection of creative exercises, Creative Workshop!
0 comments:
Post a Comment