Tips for taking great photographs

Get down on their level

  • Hold your camera at the subject’s eye level. The subject doesn’t need to look directly into the camera; the eye level angle by itself will create a personal and inviting feeling.

Use plain background

  • Before taking a picture, check the area behind your subject.
  • Lookout for trees or poles sprouting from your subject’s head.
  • A cluttered background will be distracting while a plain background will emphasize your subject.

Use flash outdoors

  • Use it in bright sunlight to lighten dark shadows under the eyes and nose, especially when the sun is directly overhead or behind your subject.
  • Use it on cloudy days, to brighten up faces and make them stand out from the background.

Move in close

  • To create impactful pictures, move in close and fill your picture with the subject.
  • Move a few steps closer or use the zoom until the subject fills the view/finder. You will eliminate background distractions and show off the details in your subject.
  • For small objects, use the camera’s macro or ‘flower’ mode to get sharp close-ups.

Take some vertical pictures

  • Many subjects look better in a vertical picture – from the Eiffel Tower to portraits of your friends.
  • Make a conscious effort to turn your camera sideways and take some vertical pictures.

Lock the focus

  • Lock the focus to create a sharp picture of off centre subjects

Move it from the middle

  • Bring your picture to life by placing the subject off centre
  • Imagine a tic-tac-toe grid and place the subject at one of the intersecting lines.

Watch the light

  • Study the effects of light in your pictures.
  • For people pictures, choose the soft lighting of a cloudy days. Avoid overhead sunlight that casts harsh shadows across faces.
  • For scenic pictures, use the long shadows and colour of early and late daylight.

Be a picture director

  • Take an extra minute and become a picture director, not just a passive picture-taker.
  • Add some props, rearrange your subjects, or try a different viewpoint.
  • Bring your subjects together and let their personalities shine. Then watch your pictures dramatically improve.
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