
Composition - Isolating your Subject
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Learning to isolate your subject is one of the most important techniques you can learn! We take pictures so we can show what we see - not what we necessarily physically see - but what is our "vision". This isn't as obscure as it sounds! Film can't capture what we see. It's physically incapable of that. So, we have to use it to our advantage. When we two-dimensionalize a scene, we flatten it. Everything is on the same plane. When we actually "see" the scene with our eyes, we have depth perception. Our brains have the ability to separate close objects from distant objects and we can easily concentrate on a close object if that is what we're viewing. But most film (or digital) cameras cannot record a 3-D image. So, when we put this 3-D image on a 2-D piece of paper, we have to compensate so that the viewer can easily see the subject and separate it from the background. There are several techniques for doing this.
Get close to your subject...
In this picture, the lily is clearly the subject. There are no other distractions to draw your viewer's attention from the subject. You can use a macro lens or a close-up accessory lens on top of your normal lens to get closer to your subject.
Control your depth of field...
How many times have you walked thru a forest and could barely see a spider web?? Well, by controlling your depth of field, you can make it clearly stand out.
Use Contrast to your advantage...
Here, I used a light background with a dark object - it's more of a silhouette.
Either way, the subject stands out!
Keep it simple...
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