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« Jump to it | Main | Beyond the Obvious »
Thursday
Mar042010

Into the frame

Grovedale, Alberta 13/02/10 Dale Thompson walks behind a harnessed team of horses as he makes his way over to a sled with bunks on it to haul firewood. One of my biggest short comings as a photographer is shooting too tight.

When I was at SAIT, my photojournalism instructor emphasized filling the frame and I think I took that advice too much to heart.

Sometimes negative space — the area which doesn't contain your photo subject — can be as important as the subject itself in telling a story in a photo.

(Cropping portraits also makes you realize that shooting tight isn't always the answer. When you shoot a portrait, crop it to 8x10 and lose all the space around the person, you begin to realize you need to shoot a little looser. It also comes into play when shooting athletes like figure skaters, gymnasts and artists like dancers. They want to see their pointed toes and fingers so they can see how good their technique is. Shooting tight is better suited for newspapers so the viewer can get a quick read of the photo whether it is a full page or one column image.)

I still have a tendency to shoot too tight but I am trying and make a conscious effort to shoot a little looser. (With the resolution of today's digital cameras cropping into a photo is a little less invasive than doing so using a Nikon D1H).

This photo is a prime example of when shooting looser helps with the story.

I could have shot this tight on Dale, the man at the reins, and his team, (although shooting tight from behind would have been an ugly shot) but shooting looser allows the viewer to see where he is going, the country he is going into, the weather conditions etc.

It adds the adverbs and adjectives to the photo sentence of "A man drives a team of horses".

On a secondary note, usually when you shoot people getting their face in the photo is desireable, but in this case shooting Dale as he drives the team away adds depth. It also adds the leading lines of the trailing reins which wouldn't be visible if he was coming towards the camera.

 

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