Wednesday, November 5, 2014

portraits

16. Take Unfocused Shots

As photographers we have ‘sharp focus’ drummed into us as an ultimate objective to achieve in our work – but sometimes lack of focus can create shots with real emotion, mood and interest.
There are two main strategies for taking unfocused images that work:
1. Focus upon one element of the image and leave your main subject blurred. To do this use a large aperture which will create a narrow depth of field and focus upon something in front of or behind your subject.
portrait-unfocused.jpgPhoto by Jeff Kubina
2. Leave the full image out of focus. To do this again choose a wide aperture but focus well in front or behind anything that is in your image (you’ll need to switch to manual focussing to achieve this).
These kinds of shots can be incredibly dreamy and mysterious.
portrait-out-of-focus.jpgPortrait by peskymac

20. Find an Interesting Subject

I have a friend who regularly goes out on the streets around Melbourne looking for interesting people to photograph.
When he finds someone that he finds interesting he approaches them, asks if they’d pose for him, he quickly finds a suitable background and then shoots off a handful of shots quickly (if they give him permission of course).
The result is that he has the most wonderful collection of photographs of people of all ages, ethnicities and backgrounds.
While many of us spend most of our time photographing our loved ones – perhaps it’d be an interesting exercise to shoot interesting strangers once in a while?
portrait-interesting-subjects.jpgPortrait by .mushi_king

A mirror or some other reflective surface offers an even easier way to take a self-portrait. In most cases, the camera will be included in the scene (but this can help make a statement about your enthusiasm for photography). You can use your camera as a prop, and hold it away from your face. When you photograph into a mirror, be sure your reflection is in focus. An infrared autofocusing system will usually focus on glass if it's aimed into a mirror, and will focus at infinity if aimed at an angle. You might try focusing at an object that's the same distance as the distance from the camera to the reflection, lock in the focus, recompose the image to include yourself, and take the picture.



Environmental portrait

I like these environmental portraits because show the person interacting with their environment. Also they are well photographed and use some of the rules of photography and rules  of portraits.

photography self portrait
I like these self portraits because thy show the photographer in a weird way through the  camera. they both use the rule of thirds and the rule of simplicity.

casual portrait

I like these photos because its just people acting natural and casual. they both use rule of thirds and lines.

my portraits will be of random people using the rules of photography, what i know about iOS, aperture, and shutter speed to get the best quality photo, and rules of portraits.



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