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The Power of Perspective in Photography

How you shoot a scene determines what kind of story you want to tell and what kind of mood you want viewers to feel when they look at a photo. The power of perspective is beyond the consideration of your photography subjects; it is about the angle of your camera, your proximity to the subjects and what you include in the frame that plays an important role in your final image.

Below are examples of different perspectives and why you’d want to take a photograph in that way.

Examples of Different Perspectives

Shoot from a low position and straight on – to get the perspective of a child

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Shoot downward – to get a sense of scale (ie, that the child is small), to eliminate distracting elements in the background, or to get natural catchlights in your subject’s eyes

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Shoot upward — to turn tall scenery, like trees or cityscape, into the backdrop

Annie-Tao-Photography-Perspective-Article-upward-view-1dps

Shoot wide – to show the environment

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Shoot up-close – to give an intimate feel or to highlight a particular action or detail

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Annie-Tao-Photography-Perspective-Article-up-close-view-2

Include reflections – to give an additional dimension to an image

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Shoot behind things – to make it feel like you’re peeking into a private moment

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What you’ll find is:  PERSPECTIVE influences a viewer’s PERCEPTION!

Conclusions:

  1. Before you press the shutter, take a moment to think about how you want your subject to be perceived in the image. Is there anything you want to highlight? A story you want to tell?
  2. You don’t need fancy camera equipment or a bunch of expensive lenses to create different perspectives. You just need creativity and the ability to move around…and BAM! You have it all.

Have you got some others to share? Please do in the comments below.

For more on perspective see these:

Read more from our Tips & Tutorials category

Neil Creek
Neil Creek

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