The place you call home is always a little piece of yourself. Whether it be the candy store you visited as a child or the merry-go-round that you rode on with mom and dad, hometown is where your memories are. What can be better than sharing those memories with others? One great way to do this is through photographs. The things you see through the lens of your camera can show the way you look at objects and places in your hometown.
Instructions
Find landmarks
- 1
Read through the history of your hometown to find out if it has landmarks, whether they are well known or not. Is there a national landmark in your hometown? Does your hometown have a local legend surrounding a place? Is there a yearly parade in your hometown?
2Find a landmark and look around it to see what strikes you as the most interesting thing about it. Get to know the place you are shooting.
3Take multiple pictures at multiple angles. Use your camera's zoom feature details of the landmark. Zoom out to get a picture of the entire landmark. Turn your camera to the right or left to get a picture of the way the sunlight bounces off the landmark or the way the blue sky contrasts the landmark. Slow the shutter speed to get a picture of a rushing fountain or waterfall.
Daily life
- 4
Take your camera with you as you go through your daily routine.
5Stop and take a picture of the scenery as you walk out of your house. Focus in on the specifics that make your neighborhood unique, such as the white picket fences or the mismatched houses.
6Go to the local parks and take pictures of the trees or the flowers. Zoom in on parents watching their children play on the swings. Change the shutter speed to catch a picture of a child chasing after a butterfly.
7Find the simple things about your hometown. Sometimes they make the best pictures. Take photos of a local bridge. Find a deserted street and take a picture of the falling leaves. Go to a local eatery and take a closeup picture of the signs, menu boards or people eating.
Play with your camera
- 8
Read through the owner's manual and find out what the different settings on your camera mean.
9Find a subject, such as a local bridge or a business, and practice taking pictures of it.
10Zoom in on the detail of your photo subject. Zoom out to show the entire subject.
11Change the shutter speed to fast and then slow to show the changes with something as simple as the wind blowing the grass or the people rushing around your subject.
12Change your level with the subject. Get down to your subject's level if it is smaller than you. Stand on a chair above your subject and take pictures. Point your camera to the sky if the subject is much taller than you. Lay on your belly and take the photo looking up at the subject.
The place you call home is always a little piece of yourself. Whether it be the candy store you visited as a child or the merry-go-round that you rode on with mom and dad, hometown is where your memories are. What can be better than sharing those memories with others? One great way to do this is through photographs. The things you see through the lens of your camera can show the way you look at objects and places in your hometown.
Instructions
Find landmarks
- 1
Read through the history of your hometown to find out if it has landmarks, whether they are well known or not. Is there a national landmark in your hometown? Does your hometown have a local legend surrounding a place? Is there a yearly parade in your hometown?
2Find a landmark and look around it to see what strikes you as the most interesting thing about it. Get to know the place you are shooting.
3Take multiple pictures at multiple angles. Use your camera's zoom feature details of the landmark. Zoom out to get a picture of the entire landmark. Turn your camera to the right or left to get a picture of the way the sunlight bounces off the landmark or the way the blue sky contrasts the landmark. Slow the shutter speed to get a picture of a rushing fountain or waterfall.
Daily life
- 4
Take your camera with you as you go through your daily routine.
5Stop and take a picture of the scenery as you walk out of your house. Focus in on the specifics that make your neighborhood unique, such as the white picket fences or the mismatched houses.
6Go to the local parks and take pictures of the trees or the flowers. Zoom in on parents watching their children play on the swings. Change the shutter speed to catch a picture of a child chasing after a butterfly.
7Find the simple things about your hometown. Sometimes they make the best pictures. Take photos of a local bridge. Find a deserted street and take a picture of the falling leaves. Go to a local eatery and take a closeup picture of the signs, menu boards or people eating.
Play with your camera
- 8
Read through the owner's manual and find out what the different settings on your camera mean.
9Find a subject, such as a local bridge or a business, and practice taking pictures of it.
10Zoom in on the detail of your photo subject. Zoom out to show the entire subject.
11Change the shutter speed to fast and then slow to show the changes with something as simple as the wind blowing the grass or the people rushing around your subject.
12Change your level with the subject. Get down to your subject's level if it is smaller than you. Stand on a chair above your subject and take pictures. Point your camera to the sky if the subject is much taller than you. Lay on your belly and take the photo looking up at the subject.
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