Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What kinds of scenery can be divided into?

What kinds of scenery can be divided into?

Foresight, panorama, middle shot, close shot, close-up. 1. Foresight: Foresight is a scene with the longest sight distance and the largest performance space. The vision is far-reaching and broad, mainly showing geographical environment, natural features and open scenery and scenes. 2. Panorama: Panorama is a picture that shows the whole body image of a character or the whole picture of a specific scene. Panorama is mainly used to show the whole picture of the subject or the whole body of the subject.

Scenery is divided into: distant view, panoramic view, middle view, close-up view and close-up.

1. Foresight: Foresight is a scene with the longest sight distance and the largest performance space. The vision is far-reaching and broad, mainly showing geographical environment, natural features and open scenery and scenes.

2. Panorama: Panorama is a picture that shows the whole body image of a character or the whole picture of a specific scene. Panorama is mainly used to show the whole picture or the whole body of the subject, while retaining a certain range of environment and activity space.

3. Mid shot: Mid shot is a part of a ready-made photo or scene of a person above the knee. Compared with the panorama, the overall image of the characters and the environmental space of the middle scene have fallen into a secondary position, and it pays more attention to specific actions and plots.

4. Close shot: Close shot is a photo of a person's chest or a part of an object. Compared with the mid-shot, the spatial range of the close-shot picture is further reduced, the picture content is more single, and the role of environment and background is further reduced. What attracts the audience's attention is the dominant figure or subject in the picture.

5. Close-up: Close-up is a ready-made picture of the young man's head above the shoulder or some details of the subject. The frame of a close-up picture is closer to the subject than a close-up picture, and it is often used to reveal the internal characteristics and essential content of the subject from nuances.