Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Photographic framing skills

Photographic framing skills

Photographic framing techniques are as follows:

1, high:

Generally, objects with vertical lines should be tall, such as mountains, tall buildings and some vertical objects.

2. Performance width:

Generally speaking, the landscape with horizontal lines should try to use horizontal maps, so that the landscape with horizontal lines can extend in two directions to show a wide range.

3. Profound performance:

Profound and broad are different, which can give people a sense of vastness. Pay attention to when taking pictures:

First, take the close-up as a foil and contrast;

Second, the angle of the camera can be taken down.

4. Performance trends:

When taking pictures, leave a gap in front of people or things to produce a moving effect.

5. Stable performance:

The horizontal line should be flat, and the arrangement of the upper and lower parts of the picture should be smooth. Otherwise, the scenery will give people a feeling of tilt, heavy or top-heavy.

The word photography comes from the Greek Φ English: phos (light) and ρ ρ ρ English: graphis (painting, sketch) or ρ ρ ρ ρ? Graphê together means "painting with light". Photography refers to the process of recording images with some special equipment. Generally, we take photos with mechanical cameras or digital cameras. Sometimes photography is also called photography, that is, the process of exposing a photosensitive medium by using the light emitted or reflected by an object.

Someone once said an incisive language: the photographer's ability is to transform the fleeting ordinary things in daily life into immortal visual images.