learn how to take creative photographs
landscapes & architecture
Shoot the most beautiful landscape and architectural photographs
A spectacular prairie or steppe. An enchanting desert. A museum that, from the outside, is a work of art in itself. Rugged Mountain ranges with impressive valleys. Or a stately square in a metropolis. You want to record these impressions in a photograph. Even so, the result will be disappointing sometimes. With the tips and tricks from this course you can improve both the quality and artistic content of your photographs. Get cracking with it and dont take a photograph, but an experience home with you!
everything haS rhythm...
Where does the difference between an ordinary photograph and an exceptional one lie? In lots of areas. But rhythm is an important factor. Certainly in busy situations - such as an extremely ornate facade or a varied landscape - the eye needs calm to be able to comprehend the versatility of the subject. Rhythm and order provide this.
look for the series So consciously look out for repeating elements. For example, roofs of houses, a row of windmills or telephone poles, a colonnade or leaves from a tree that are blowing in the same direction. Itll surprise you how many you find once you have an eye for them. Youll discover an angle through which hidden structures and series suddenly transform into an artistically united whole.
play with colour contraStS
Vast landscapes are often beautiful because they sometimes are a single colour. For example snowy mountain tops, a wooded slope or sandy dunes. If you shoot a photograph of this, the results are not always that impressive. That is because just that one colour can be a bit too much of a good thing. Or in other words, too little. You miss a refreshing element. You can solve this by adding a strongly contrasting colour. Put, for example, a couple of brightly coloured skis straight up in the snow or a couple of bright yellow Wellingtons in a field. Be conscious of the place where you put the extra colour element. Red will certainly demand a lot of attention.
give your day some colour Do you regularly take your camera with you when you go out? Approach colour as a theme for a change. For example, choose a single colour for a day that you then look for in the city (or outside it). Youll see that youll photograph your surroundings in a completely different way. This way, you connect all sorts of subjects together thanks to the colour, in all its shades and nuances. Save the photographs at home in colour categories. This will give you exciting collections, which you can later enjoy comparing to each other.
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keep the human dimenSion in mind
Colossal buildings, monuments or trees can be so impressive that you immediately want to photograph them. Wait just a beat, and ask yourself if the size of the subject will be visible on the photograph. The term big only really takes on meaning thanks to the opposite phenomenon: small(er). Prevent a great impression from becoming boring by introducing a comparative element in the composition. This can be a person next to a statue. But also an animal can lend the overwhelming impression of the landscape more value. What is important is that you play with the proportions. This leaves the original impression intact more.
work with depth of field
Actually, you can consider photography as an advanced form of realistic painting. Everyone understands that a painter first thinks about the composition that hes going to make. The different parts of a picture are not given a particular place in the composition by accident. In the case of landscape photography, mother nature has already laid out all the elements for you. Its up to you to make an interesting composition from it all. Creating depth is a handy trick for success here.
use the correct camera setting Compact cameras are equipped with a special mode with which you can shoot more attractive landscape photography, most often just referred to as landscape. You will find this mode under S, Scene or Scenery. Check to ensure that your flash is off. create layers Is your camera switched to the correct mode? Ensure that your photograph gets more depth. Well take a vast lake as an example, with wooded banks on the far side and, behind that, hills or mountains. So three layers. Dont just snap a shot as if you were standing on the bank, but look for a twig or bush that is hanging over the waters edge. Position this in the foreground, crouch down and youll see that this fourth layer amplifies the other three. You can use this method in almost every view; you can always find something that you can put in the foreground.
low light, lotS of effect
Atmospheric images often owe their strengths to darkness. For example, a landscape in the dusk or a church interior. But how do you communicate this special atmosphere? After all, darkness and photography dont go that well together. So youll have to make good use of the available light. You achieve the most beautiful effects at the boundaries of what is possible. As a result, far from all of the photographs will be successful, but this makes experimenting all the more exciting and a successful print all the more beautiful.
use the correct camera settings
To begin with, switch your camera to night mode. Youll find this under S, Scene or Scenery. Then ensure that your camera doesnt move. A tripod is an excellent solution here. Or look for support, for example a wall or church bench. Putting down your camera and using the self-timer works well too. Finally, you can also raise the ISO rating in the menu. This makes your camera more sensitive to light. The photograph will become slightly grainier, but this can also produce an artistic effect.
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look at the world through a (different) pair of glaSSeS
Literally. Because what applies to your eyes, also applies to a camera lens. Using colour filters is a tried and tested method of adding colour and achieving a romantic effect. Through simply holding the lens of a pair of sunglasses in front of your camera youll get surprising results. An ordinary pair of sunglasses works fine, but for more colour contrast use a pair of glasses with a UV filter in the glasses.
interplay of lineS
As a photographer, you should never just look at a landscape or building, but try to discover a diagonal line. The rising crest of a dune for example, a long road or the edge of a roof. This makes the photograph more dynamic. You can also look for individual parts that together form a line. Consider a ridge of mountains, clumps of trees or window frames viewed from a certain angle. And another composition rule that is useful for landscapes is to position the horizon at 1/3rd of the picture. Tilt the camera slightly forward for more land, back slightly for more sky. This will immediately make your photograph less standard.
tips for Semi-pros
Your camera has many more possibilities than have been discussed here for getting more out of yourself and for taking more attractive photographs. Many people are hesitant about delving deeper into the menu and trying out new functions that they dont already know. Understandable, but certainly unnecessary. Experiment and dont let yourself be put off. And if you get stuck, switch your camera off and start again! If youve been taking photographs for a while and the tips above are obvious to you, you may benefit more from the following more advanced advice.
uSe a telephoto lenS
A wide-angle lens works well enough for landscape photography. In the case of a compact camera, the lens is in this position when you switch it on. For single-lens reflex users a telephoto lens is also very suitable for photographing landscapes, due to the fact that you extract the depth from the photograph. Through this, foreground and background form a whole, while in reality they are sometimes kilometres apart. Approaching landscapes as planes you unite with a telephoto lens produces interesting results. The effect is difficult to describe and is a lot clearer in the pictures themselves. Try experimenting with this. Through first photographing a view with a wide-angle lens and then with a telephoto lens. Youll see the difference immediately.
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city By night
Tv
Youve probably seen them; impressive photographs of cities at night. Attractively lit buildings or monuments, where traffic races by in fascinating white and red streamers. You can do it too, by complying with two simple conditions. Use a slow shutter speed and make sure that your camera doesnt move. Set your camera to the Tv or S mode and choose a shutter speed of 1/8s or even 1/4s. Then put your camera on a tripod, or lay it on a sturdy base and use the self-timer. Moving lights will suddenly change into mysterious stripes.
uSe a polariSation filter
With a polarisation filter you can achieve different effects. Blue skies become more intense, you will get more contrast and you can avoid undesired reflections or dazzle. You can only use a polarisation filter in combination with a single-lens reflex camera. This is because you need to turn the filter to a particular position, after which you can evaluate the result in your viewfinder or on your LCD display. You need to be able to look through the lens for this.
Bluer skies There is a lot of polarised light in a blue sky. With the filter, you hold this back as it were, so that the blue becomes darker and more penetrating. Another advantage is that the clouds look whiter due to the fact that they stand out better against the deep blue heavens. So the polarisation filter ensures more contrast, but it cant change the colours. It doesnt make a grey sky blue, it just amplifies the blue thats already there. prevent dazzle Sometimes certain objects are difficult to photograph because they are damp, or made of shiny material that reflects the light. A wet road surface for example, the silvery underside of birch leaves, a futuristic building with lots of reflective glass or a surface of water. You can suppress these reflections with a polarisation filter. Similar to Polaroid sunglasses.
a beautiful photograph starts with you having fun!
The most beautiful photographs are a perfect mix of a creative eye and an optimum use of the technical possibilities. Landscape and architecture photography isnt the easiest of specialisations in that respect. So dont be too disappointed if a photograph is less favourable than youd hoped. Let it stimulate you to experiment further and investigate what you can do to discover the photographer in yourself. Most of all, its about having fun. The pleasure you experience from the unexpected possibilities of your camera. And from a new way of looking at the world around you. Heading off somewhere? Dont forget to take several memory cards, an extra rechargeable battery, ordinary batteries, a charger, lenses and a tripod with you. Visit www.canon-europe.com/store for a complete overview of handy accessories. Good luck!
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