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Ten Photography Tips

This is a post I’ve been thinking about for awhile. It’s by no means meant to be some kind of exhaustive list of the laws of photography, or even a set of rules that I think people ought to be following. It’s just some of the things I try to keep in my mind anytime I’m going out to take photographs because I think that it makes for more interesting pictures. There are more of course but I wanted to keep it to a nice even ten and also these are ones that could be applied whether you’re using a fancy DSLR or a camera phone:

1. High Noon

Midday is the most boring light of the day. Mornings and evenings are much more interesting and the shadows are more flattering if you’re photographing people.

2. A Different Point Of View

Avoid shooting straight from eye level. Kneel (or lie!) down, stand on a wall or hold your camera high or low or somewhere where you can’t look through the viewfinder. This takes a bit of practice and you’ll probably have to brace your camera against the ground or a wall, but when it works it’s my favourite kind of shot.

3. What’s It All About?

Give your landscapes context. That could mean a person, or a building, an animal or even a single flower or tree. Anything that shows the scale and gives it a focal point.

4. The Devil’s In The Details

I think this motto applies to anything creative because it’s always that little extra detail that you add that makes the drawing or animation stand out, not just photography. Look for the story in the scene you’re shooting and pick out the details that give it that extra something special. Don’t settle for the first obvious few shots that you immediately see, get them out of the way and then look a little harder.

5. Shakin’ All Over

When you’re not hanging off the edge of a cliff attempting tip number 2, remember to hold your camera properly. If you can, brace yourself by leaning a shoulder against a wall or find a steady surface to rest your camera on. If you’re standing, stand with your feet slightly apart, tuck your elbows in, exhale and squeeze, don’t stab, the shutter. Relax!

6. Zoom Zoom

Don’t use the zoom to frame your shots. Know why you’re choosing a particular focal length and then either move closer or farther away from your subject to get the correct framing.

7. Composition Made Easy

Composition can be made to sound very complicated but just three simple things will improve the look of your shots. First, try putting the focal point or subject in one of the four corners of your photograph. Second, horizon lines are best in the top third or bottom third of the frame, not the middle (I admit, I break this one a lot). Third, diagonal lines are more interesting than straight ones.

8. The Sky’s The Limit

If the sky isn’t interesting then leave it out of the photograph. Avoid the white sky of death that we see so often here in Ireland, especially during the winter. Try to find a better angle, perhaps get up a bit higher and take a shot looking down or put your subject in front of a colourful wall. Anything but a huge expanse of pale grey nothing.

9. Fill The Frame

Following on from that, make every part of your picture count. Take a minute to look at what’s around the thing you’re photographing. Does the background help the photo by creating a frame and leading your eye to the subject, or does it distract? If it’s all a big jumble think about either changing your angle so the background is free of clutter or move in closer.

10. The Dirty Little Secret

While I do think that you’re better off trying to get your photos as “finished” as possible in-camera, don’t be ashamed of using Photoshop. So many photographers seem to try and play it down, mumbling that they did a tiny bit of Photoshop on their photo as if confessing to cheating. No amount of Photoshop will fix a bad photograph but it does have it’s place and is a wonderful tool. Remember that even film photographers play around with chemicals, exposures, cropping and paper types in the darkroom to get similar effects. In my opinion, I think the best way to use Photoshop is 95% enhancement (saturation, contrast, black and white conversion) and 5% fixing of mistakes (cropping, white balance, clone tool). Don’t use it to get rid of double chins or make people’s legs longer and skinnier…that kind of stuff can be seen a mile away.

So that’s my little manifesto. Feel free to disregard them all (well except for the double chin thing…that’s non-negotiable) and if you have any of your own please, please leave a comment and share them with me.

14 replies on “Ten Photography Tips”

Very good tips.

I must say from looking at your photos for some time now you have a masterful eye for composition even in what would seem to many as very ordinary places. Many of your tips show how well you know this – but it still helps to be an artist inside as I think you are. Even a place as flat as Sandymount Strand you made really interesting. I know a jewel like Eve helps of course!

What could I possibly offer as added general tip for your readers? I suppose personally I love sun and blue skies for photographing landscapes and buildings. I like the colours which the sunlight brings out. I think Ireland is as dull as dishwater on cloudy days unless you are doing portraits or working on certain moody type shots of places. Mornings and evenings do tend to be better for nice contrasty detail on landscapes but in non summer months the sun is lowish in most parts of day in Ireland. And of course anything in the photo to add depth and framing and leading the eye into the picture.

Oh BTW…its well for you that you can suggest kneeling or lying down…pity for me it’s hard to get back up again!

Wonderful post Claire! Am really interested in learning how to take better photographs. Don’t suppose you have any advice on a good camera? Am interested in a getting a new digital in the next year, nothing too fancy (or expensive), just for family pix and the like, but something nice enough that it could take really nice pictures! I think most people probably have little idea what to look for in a camera and just buy the highest MP thinking that’s good! Keep up the wonderful work… I just love your photos!

Great Advice Claire…now if I can just remeber them when I’m taking photos. I must admit when I’m taking pictures of the kids…my goal is just to get them to be still. I have an old digital and it seems to be an eternity by the time I focus and snap.

I’m looking foward to exerimenting with your tips…at least with things that don’t move.

Haha, John, I do sympathise. I was lying in the grass today trying to get good shots of Eve and I think all I ended up with were grass stains. Oh well, sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t 😀

Hi Deborah, it really depends on how much you’re willing to spend. I don’t know much about which compact digital cameras are good, I mostly lust after the newer DSLRs that I can’t afford. I think the best thing to do is to decide on a budget, see what’s available at that price and check out http://www.dpreview.com to see which ones come out best. I spent a lot of time reading their reviews before I decided on mine and I go back whenever I’m thinking of getting a new lens.

Marci, I know what you mean, I end up doing the most ridiculous things to get Eve to look at me and respond. She’s gotten too wise to the camera at this stage.

Re, Deborah’s quest for a camera…there is great choice and I agree re. http://www.dpreview.com (that’s how I decided on my Nikon last month),

But I can’t resist pointing you all to a guy on Flickr called natureloving in Paris http://flickr.com/photos/natureloving/ We’ve become pals and swap Flickr e-mails. He’s fairly new to photography but takes stunning shots (albeit simple compositions). His shots get rave comments. He has a tiny Sony Cybershot T9 which would fit in a shirt breast pocket. So the point is – you can do great things with even modest cameras. Don’t spend too much – see if you like it for a year or so and then maybe move on.

Hello Claire

Found your link on Sandys page and had a quick flick back before reading your tips. Your pics are excellent! So therefore I came back to read your tips and they are really good. No jargon or bullshit just good tips! One thing I dont like is people banging on about a load of technical crap that non professional people cant keep up with. So thanks a mill and I will stay tuned 🙂

Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, Claire. Now I’ve no excuse for screwing up my snaps other than my lack of an eye for composition, Parkinsons-esque shake and dodgy camera!
Paige

Thanks for this Claire. I’ve been tempted to ask many times whether you amazing photographs were camera, content or technique or what. Either way I reckon you’ve got a great knack for it.

J.

You’re welcome John B, and please ask away. I’d like to think all three of those things play a part in anything good in my photographs with the other big helps being sheer volume of shots taken, input from other, better photographers and good luck :D. I do think wonderful shots can be taken without expensive equipment although I love my camera and am very thankful to have it. Just follow that link that John left up above to the Flickr member natureloving. Beautiful photographs with a compact digital camera.

I found your post a little late but I found it. Great info thank you. I’m one who does find a lot of dull sky in my photos and wonder how that happenned.

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