5/15/2011

5 Secrets To Capturing Remarkable Landscaping Photos

By Frank Lucer


Landscaping digital photography lures thousands and thousands of budding photographers. Nature offers countless possibilities for capturing shots that captivate audiences. It is a perfect testing ground for newcomers who wish to establish their photography skills for use in other areas. Whether you're shooting a waterfall, mountain range, or sprawling wheat fields, recording the organic elegance your environment offers depends on just what you do with your camera.

Beneath, we will provide you a number of suggestions for making your panorama images come alive. While composition is essential to creating interesting pictures, you will learn that the technical aspects of taking photos (i.e. your digital camera settings, gear, etc.) are just as vital.

#1 - Make The Most Of Gloomy Weather Conditions

Do not assume that vibrant sunshine provides an ideal picture taking environment; in truth, temperamental weather presents far more possibilities to evoke mood in your target audience. For instance, dark clouds accumulating over a field creates a dark, and even menacing, atmosphere.

Another benefit is that gloomy weather creates variation in your compositions. Tentative sunlight piercing a cloud cover produces shadows that splay across the ground. To viewers, this is much more intriguing than a bright, gorgeous afternoon.

#2 - Make The Most Of Designs And Lines

No matter where you're shooting, your environment will present lines that guide your visitor's eyes. The obstacle is including them in your compositions in a way that efficiently utilizes their influence.

For instance, assume you are taking pictures of a forest from a distance. The cover (or canopy) of the forest offers a distinct horizontal line that slashes across the sky. Or, you might be photographing a stream that cuts diagonally throughout your frame. In both instances, these lines can lead your viewers' eyes. The magnitude to which they do so is dependent on how you capture your photos.

#3 - Lessen Aperture To Extend Depth Of Field

Panorama digital photography virtually requires a long depth of field (as opposed to portraits). You would like to bring as much of your foreground and backdrop into focus as you possibly can given that doing thus gives your viewers more details to enjoy.

A long depth of field is achieved with a small aperture. Aperture is the hole by way of which light enters your digital camera and hits the image sensor. By minimizing the size of the hole (i.e. using a high f-number configuration, such as F/22), less lighting is allowed in through your lens. Simply because of the angle in which light rays arrive into the digital camera, a smaller aperture expands your depth of field.

As a side note, you should at all times experiment with the configurations on your digital camera. While panoramas are especially well-suited for a long depth of field, a greater aperture may create a distinctive effect.

#4 - Look For Wind

Wind generates movement in your setting. Although your photographs are fundamentally instances seized in time, motion makes your environment seem vibrant to your audience. For instance, consider a strong wind that is blowing through a group of trees and shrubs. The leaves and branches are shifting, and therefore appear alive. Think of wind blowing through the long grass of a sprawling field. Here, too, there is a dynamic that comes through the image.

Don't assume that a tranquil environment offers the perfect shooting environment. With landscape photography, motion creates attraction more successfully than calmness.

#5 - Keep Your Digital Camera Steady

Hand held picture taking is convenient, but introduces camera tremble into your photos. This is particularly the case if you are taking pictures with a longer shutter speed; the result is that your photos may show up somewhat out of focus. This will be a problem when you go to develop them, or if you get into custom poster printing.

Get into the routine of using a tripod whenever you capture panorama shots. It will eradicate camera shake. A side benefit is that you will have the ability to make the most of lengthier shutter speeds, which, in turn, gives you more flexibility to try things out with different aperture configurations.

Experience performs a big part in becoming more proficient in shooting scenery. Thus, consider the tips above as recommendations instead of guidelines; use them as a guide from which to develop your own distinctive style.




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