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Sunday, January 4, 2015

Try a New Perspective

Every photo tells a story. Although everybody now-a-days is stuck taking the same predictable pictures that lack their own unique story. The Unforgettable Photograph by George Lange and Scott Mowbray provides many tips on how to leave your comfort zone, and take a picture you might not consider "right". There are many angles and perspectives you can see the world through by laying down, standing up, sitting, crouching, looking down, or looking up, so don't limit what angle or perspectives you allow photos to have. "You never want to feel like your feet are planted in one place, that you are locked at eye level, standing up" (60).
Out of the many suggestions one was to move below a subject and look up. This gives the person or object a sense of being superior or more powerful than the photographer below (83).It is an angle at which you do not normally look at someone, unless they are much taller than you or you are sitting or laying below them, which gives it an interesting look! To accomplish this angle try laying down on your back and looking up, or have the subject raised above you and just simply take the picture standing. I took this picture of my friend by having her stand on a boulder in front of me to raise her off the ground. 

One of the other techniques that I attempted was moving the camera over the subject completely. As Lange says, "shooting from above is as simple way to eliminate the background and get an interesting picture: We don't usually look at the world this way" (92). It gives the viewer a completely different perspective on the subject than would normally be seen. I tried out this technique while in the snow, and took a picture focused on the snow that had fallen in her hair with only her head in the shot. This allowed for a picture in which rather than having a distracting background scenery or full body shot you get the clear idea of the picture instantly. It allows for a completely unique photo, as do all of the suggested techniques given by Mowbray and Lange.

What is your favorite angle or perspective to take pictures in? What types have you tried before?

Citation: 
Lange, George. The Unforgettable Photograph. New York, NY: Workman Publishing Company, 2013.

7 comments:

  1. This is really interesting! I take a photography class and this is very accurate, you don't want your picture to be boring so interesting angles are a must! I once got a really great picture of my friends brother playing basketball going in for a slam dunk, the angle that I was positioned in was laying on my back on the ground

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  2. That was another example in the book i was reading! It was called "get into the action" or something like that. It sounds like it made a really cool picture. I really want to try to get a shot like that sometime too! Thanks Lauren.

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  3. I was in Photo 1 last year and I loved it. I'm always looking for good shots, whether it be the view, cars, or both. I don't take real life photos as much anymore, due to the fact that a lot of games have in-game cameras. It sounds weird, I know, but I'm playing with lighting effects, focus, aperture, etc. I'll have a link to one of my pictures that I took recently in the game "Forza Horizon 2."

    Image: http://forzamotorsport.net/Handlers/GetPhoto.ashx?game=fh2360&id=433505&full=true

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  4. Thanks "Noize Tank", the technicalities of the photos is very important! It's good that you experiment with them (:

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    1. I uploaded a few pictures to my Imgur account. I don't use it much and I use it to show people builds that I have done on car building websites. It's based off my Google account, so bear the weird name. "Noize Tank" is my channel name because I made the mistake of pairing my YT channel to Google+. I'm actually Henri Durand. Wanted to throw that out there.

      Imgur: http://rkdnt3000.imgur.com/all/

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  5. I really like your perspective of taking the picture above the subject - interesting angle.

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  6. Thanks Mrs. Robison, i thought it turned out well too!

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