S SIVAPRASAD's yak pad சி.சிவ பிரசாத்

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Photography Tips - avoiding common mistakes


Have you ever felt disappointed when your photo prints did'nt look as
great as when you first shot them ? Here are the tips to avoid it;

1. Over exposed Pictures -
(a)
Daylight entering through an open window behind the subject - Either
close all windows, draw the curtains, change the angle to avoid the
window or shift to another location.
(b) A white monument glowing
behind the subject - this happens if the subject is in the shade and
the monument in the sun. You should either move the subject into the
sunlight and use a flash or get him to pose on the side of the building
that is in shade.
(c) Subject standing under trees in blobs of sun and shade - use a flash and move close.
(d)
White person wearing black or black person in white - change the outfit
to offwhite/dark blue or pose them before a neutral background like a
green garden etc.

2. Under exposed Photos
(a)
The city lights that looked awesome in the night showed up as a black
background - The flash covers only a certain area of maybe 3 meters. If
its dark, always come as close as possible to the background.
(b)
The beautiful sea at dusk is undistinguishable - Never wait for it to
get that dark. Even if you can clearly see around you, the details will
never show up on film even with a flash. This is also true for rock
concerts and sporting events held under lights outdoors.

3. Bad Lighting
(a)Your
friend looks old and wrinkly, drugged or shiny - Mornings, evenings and
cloudy days give the best natural lighting. If you just have to shoot
at midday either shoot in the shade or use a flash.
(b) Lens Flare/
Silhouette - To avoid this, make sure the sun is behind the camera so
that the subject's face is well lighted. If the subject starts
squinting in the light, move him a bit to the side.
(c) Always use the flash indoors, in shadowy areas or at night.

4. Other Mistakes -
(a)
Body/head half cut off - Always hold the camera at eye level of the
subject especially for kids or pets. Bend down to get shots of the
subject sitting on the floor, lying on the beach etc. Never ask your
Granny with Arthritis or Back pain to click such photos - they will
invariably come out cut off or lopsided.
(b) Tilted Shots - always
hold the camera either horizontally or vertically - use the horizon as
a guide to make sure the camera is straight.
(c) Strap of camera / thumb coming in the frame, poles/plants growing from people's head - Pay Attention while shooting.

5. Embarassing Photos -
(a)
Strangers frozen in the background making weird actions - don't be in a
hurry, wait for them to move off, ask them to move or try from a
different angle.
(b) Get your friends/family to pose and smile - If
a few are being spoiltsports, don't make the other's wait an eternity
as you try to change thier mind. The party poopers are usually either
having a bad hairday, no makeup, wrong outfit or some personal feud and
you can probably take a picture of them later, if needed.
(c) Beware
of towels, underwear lying around the room that may come in the frame -
tidy the room or dump stuff in the opposite corner.
(d) Friends
making funny faces in the photo or stuffing their mouth with food -
you'll laugh but regret it later when the prints prove they are not
that adorable. These photos usually end up being torn or hidden for
life. Don't waste the film.
(e) Posing on a beach with tourists
sunbathing in the nude in the background or photos that show you or
your friend as a pervert / or a loser - Ditto as point d - don't waste
the film. ( ok maybe one or two at the beach )

6. Lopsided photos without a subject
- Driving on a highway, you looked out the window and could'nt resist a
shot of the beautiful valley / sunset - Always park the car, get out,
see you have a subject (a person, yourself, a building , a
tree...anything) before the background, aim and then shoot.

7. Subject's face is a tiny dot -
Subject should be at the most 3 metres away from the camera. If the
monument behind is too wide for the frame, move the camera and your
friend forward till they both fit in the frame. Cut out large expanses
of sky or sand that don't add anything to the picture while framing
your shot.

8. Blurry Faces - if the subject is too close (maybe 1 metre) to the camera - Move the camera back or the subject forward.

9. Rain -
you end up with round transparent white circles on the print because of
tiny water droplets on the lens. If its raining, remember to wipe the
camera with a soft lint free cloth and get someone to hold an umbrella
over you.

10. Reflections - beware of mirror, glass, clear lakes and other reflective surfaces.
(a) Reflection of you holding the camera - avoided by paying attention and changing the angle of the camera.
(b) Reflection of the Flash going off in a mirror behind the subject - ditto
(c) Photo which has a shadow of you holding the camera - ditto

You know, everything cannot be fixed with Photoshop. Happy
Clicking !