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Mike
Carruthers:
Do you take good photographs?
Scott Kelby:
When most people go to shoot a vacation picture, they center
everything. The horizon line is in the center of the picture,
the person is in the center of the frame, every single thing
is centered.
Digital photography expert Scott Kelby…
If you want to make your work look more professional, you're
going to either put your horizon line in the top third or the
bottom third. And you're going to put your subject either to
the left third or to the right third. And that is a huge, huge
thing in composing the pictures like the pro. They call it the
rule of thirds and you'll hear photographers talk about that
quite a bit.
Scott says try to avoid taking photographs of just things.
Unless you're out there like trying to shoot the Grand Canyon.
One of the things that brings life and excitement to photos
is people and getting people into the act. And shooting from
angles that, you know, a lot of times when you're shooting low
you want to get your kids in the picture. Don't' be afraid to
get down on the ground and shoot upward. You'll get some amazing
pictures. It's great to climb up on a bench and shoot down at
the kids lying in the grass. Anytime you change the perspective
from what everybody else always does, all of sudden people will
go, "Wow, you've got a really good eye."
And now with digital photography, Scott says what you do
with the picture after you take it is very important.
When you go from your camera into your computer and start
cropping and retouching and being creative, that's where the
fun is, that's the part that you couldn't do before.
There's a link
to Scott's website from
ours: somethingyoushouldknow.net.
I'm Mike Carruthers and that's Something You Should Know.
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