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Jul
31st

LANDSCAPE

Author: admin | Files under Natural World
landscape_photographyIn the hands of a creative photographer, an artful landscape can be made of any subject from a New England farm to an Inca ruin in Peru. Landscapes are simply photographs that describe an outdoor place--any place at all.The natural inclination--especially in scenic areas--is to put on a wide-angle lens and randomly take in as much of a vista as possible, assuming that the beauty or intrigue of a place will carry the photograph. Usually it won't. While a wide-angle lens's ability to include a broad view can be a real blessing, often it is better to use a telephoto lens to isolate a particularly interesting portion of a scene. In either case, you must

find a way to organize and present your landscapes with as little excess baggage as possible. Try to think of a landscape photo as being like a short story that has a beginning (the foreground), a middle (the middle ground), and an ending (the background). In a farm scene, for example, you could use an old wagon as the foreground, a winding dirt road as the middle ground, and a bright red barn as the background. A farmer leading a horse up the road can stand in as your main character. (Scatter a few chickens around if you need some minor characters.) Very few landscapes will be so neatly arranged at first glance, so your main chore is finding a vantage point that translates to the viewer what it was that attracted your eye to the scene. A landscape should also capture the spirit and mood of a place. Before you even raise a lens to the scene, pause to ask yourself what it is about it that appeals to you emotionally. Is it the yellow morning light glowing through the fields of hay? The color, direction, quality, and intensity of light all have a profound effect on landscapes. Or is it the evening mist rising off the river? Weather in all its forms can work wonders with even the most common of scenes.

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