Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - [Girl Photography Daily] The classic shots of Maple Leaf and Mount Fuji.

[Girl Photography Daily] The classic shots of Maple Leaf and Mount Fuji.

Hello! I haven't seen a girl for a long time. Photography comes again every day ~ autumn is here. When sorting out the photos, I found that there are many autumn photos, each with different customs, shooting techniques and concepts. Share the behind-the-scenes story with you! Join the magic Julie fan group and read it first to make sure you don't miss the new article! facebook/MagicJulie。 TW/)

If you also like taking pictures, but you still can't master the essentials and shoot your own satisfactory works, then maybe you need more thinking instead of more skills.

The theme photo this time is a photo of Mount Fuji and maple leaves. The shooting location is the Maple Leaf Promenade in Hekou Lake. Every autumn, the largest estuary lake among the five lakes of Mount Fuji will flood into a large number of photographers. Because the Maple Leaf Corridor is the easiest place to reach the maple leaf at the foot of Mount Fuji, it is quite suitable for novice challenges. The picture below shows the old man next door when I took this demonstration photo.

Generally speaking, when shooting maple leaves, the basic common sense is "shooting against the light", that is, putting maple leaves between the sun and the camera and shooting them from the tree to the blue sky (with red leaves in the middle) can best show the contrast between the blue sky and the red leaves.

Shooting the sun through red leaves is more vivid and colorful than shooting maple leaves along the direction of light, and the details of maple leaves are particularly clear. The picture below is at sunset. I found a golden sunset hanging obliquely in the Woods and falling on the maple leaves. I immediately took a picture with my camera, so the background was all black, but the color of the maple leaf was amazing. However, when shooting large scenes (magnificent scenery), this ideal cannot be achieved because of the collocation of landscapes.

This photo introduced in this article is a classic way to shoot Mount Fuji in autumn. Different from ordinary maple leaf photos, because the maple leaf matches Mount Fuji, the theme of the image is autumn scenery, but the main body is Mount Fuji.

The perfect and symmetrical shape of Mount Fuji makes the photo structure quite stable and balanced, but because of the weather, sometimes there are clouds around it, which causes a sense of balance to tilt. But this problem is not a problem in this demonstration photo, because the maple leaf part in the landscape is not a balanced composition.

Maple leaf is a plant, unless it is shot from a special angle, this closed shooting method will keep the balance of the photo better than pursuing complete symmetry. (Click on the map directly to see the enlargement! )

Another key point is the setting of shutter value. This photo was taken in strong light and no wind, so I set it to? ISO 100,? 1/20。 But it's actually quite risky. Whether it's hand shaking or maple leaf shaking, as long as it's beyond the allowable range (I think it's natural to be a little shaky), it's necessary to remake it.

If you want to shoot maple leaves without shaking at all, I think it is within the allowable range to raise ISO to 400 or even 800. However, high ISO performance, of course, the image quality and color performance will be worse, personal choice! If you have a chance, you might as well give it a try! Read more good news: help the author magic Julie press like! facebook/MagicJulie。 TW/

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Author: Magic Julie

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Top photo source: Magic Julie

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