Is there any course to teach how to composite? I know the rule of third and pattern. But how to position yourself?
Is there any course to teach how to composite? I know the rule of third and pattern. But how to position yourself?
Is there any course to teach how to composite? I know the rule of third and pattern. But how to position yourself?
edutilos- said:It's simple, you don't need anyone to teach you.
Just take your camera, look through the lens and move. And think. And try to visualize how it looks without moving.
If you do this consciously, soon it will become a subconscious habit and you will assimilate it, and do it automatically. Hope this helps. Cheers.
Bro. What u mean by not moving?
Valkarian said:means you dont have to visually see it to get an idea of what you want your shot looks like. if you can pre-visualise your shot in your head then you'll probably know which angle and composition you're looking for already.
rvf79 said:For event is there any angle I should take to make it look nicer than normal? Apart from tunning down to the height of the group n shooting them.
Composition is like quite hard as I am weak in arts...
daredevil123 said:
rvf79 said:Is there any course to teach how to composite? I know the rule of third and pattern. But how to position yourself?
donut88 said:There is no course on this. It's all PRACTICE and PRACTICE.
For a start, go read some good photography books on compositions. Read up on things like vectors, lines, triangles, circles, frame within frame.
N Once u understand this, u will see the compositions.
At the end of day, photography is an art, not a science. Books won't teach u much. U got to have some talent first. No talent, means no talent. Cannot be taught.
T.T dat y I am engineer. Sob. No talent on arts. :X
rvf79 said:Is there any course to teach how to composite? I know the rule of third and pattern. But how to position yourself?
Edwin Francis said:Haha, I was just about to ask if you were an engineer
But I'll say this -- don't make excuses like having no talent. If you have eyes, the ability to judge between a good and bad photos, and the desire to create good (or great) images, you have the starting ingredients. What you make of it is up to you.
BTW I'm pretty sure there are more than a few engineer types who are photographers in CS, some of whom have switched careers from engineering to arts
Cliché advice I'm going to give...shoot a lot and get people to critique a lot.
On a deeper level, there are many different fields of photography. What works in still life photography may not work in portraits or landscapes or events coverage or sports...you get my point. Find out what kind of photography appeals to you and then read up. For a start, you may want to run through the CS gallery and see why certain photos work for you and why others don't.
I assume you have pretty much mastered your camera, if not, please go and play with your camera more, because just as a painter needs to be familiar with his brushes, canvas and paints before he can paint his vision, the same way a photographer needs to know the camera's capabilities and limits to fully realize the vision in your mind's eye.