Make a Great Photographer
By: Date: June 16, 2019 Categories: Photography
  1. Orientation: How you place the camera is going to make or break the situation. When you have imagined the scene in your mind fully and are all set to capture it the way you have conceived, align the camera to your imagination. This is an art you need to learn and it comes by sheer practice. Many a times, you must have faced this problem that the captured shot is way different that what you saw in actual. This is a case of flawed orientation. Sometimes, flukes happen and a great shot is captured. But to make that fluke a habit, train under a professional and make as many mistakes as you can. You will learn better and last like forever eternity in the business.
  2. Organization: How elements are placed in respect to each other in a frame decide the end result of the click. It is called composition. In a photography school, you may learn to learn about composition of colors, of sizes and of background elements that make the photo hard-hitting.
  3. Depth: The Depth of field is the study that a photographer needs to master for delivering fabulous pics each time. It is one the most easily ignored part of study which deserves all the attention actually. There are a number of misconception about aperture sizes, etc. but the real game lies in choosing the correct point-and-shoot.
  4. Lighting: In photography, light is actually the master and photographer is the slave. One needs to set the schedule according to weather conditions to get a perfect shot of nature. In studio environment too, the game is to allow the light from the windows and other elements to play their part the way you want them to. It all comes by continuous practice and undying determination. Photo-editing tools are some of the easy hacks to master the amount of light, but nothing is possible without guidance and correcting.
  5. Brightness: Also, known as exposure, it means how much bright you want your photo to look, so that it retains its natural appeal. This aspect is quite subjective though, but the second opinion of your mentor in school can help you improve your perspective.