Tag Archives: Essays

The Art of Photography

Here is my 2010 school research paper. Because I am interested in photography, I decided to make that the topic of my paper. At the public library, I checked out as many books as I could find about photography and worked with mom to write notecards about the particular points I wanted to discuss. Most of the books were at least 15 years old, so they didn’t cover digital photography. Fortunately, the basic principles of photography remain the same. Now, without further ado, I give you THE paper!

When my brother was ten, he thought that an expensive baseball bat would make him like Babe Ruth. Of course, once he got one, he found out that the bat didn’t make him a pro. The same thing is true in most fields, including photography. I got my first little camera when I was eleven. I thought that only really expensive cameras could take good pictures. As I looked into photography, I found it is not only the camera but the understanding of photography that will make good pictures. Composition, color, and lighting are three important aspects of photography. Understanding them is the first step to understanding photography.

Composition

The first important aspect of photography is composition. Composition is the organization of the main subject, foreground and background of your picture. A good composition should lead the eye towards your main subject and then to the background.

A good way to start is to decide the main subject of your picture. You should think about the shape and form of your subject. Shape refers to the 2D outline of your subject, and form refers to the 3D outline. Math shapes such as triangles (mountains, and rooftops), circles (ponds, balls) and squares and rectangles (diving boards, cliffs) capture the eye’s attention.

Sidelighting and low point-of-view make this snapshot more dramatic.

You should always highlight interesting forms, which usually are your main subject. One way to do this is to direct the light towards the object. This can be done with a reflector if light is not shining on the object. (To make a reflector, see Photography Projects.) Secondly, silhouettes bring out the shape rather than form of an object. A third way to highlight your subject is to use foreground interest. This means using nonessential objects in the front to deepen your composition. The objects in the foreground should relate to a color in the composition or another object.

Another way to compose a picture is to focus on the texture and pattern of an object rather than its shape or form. A way you can see textures and patterns is to do the “squint test”. When you squint, textures and patterns stand out. These two things will be most noticed when the camera is focused on the foreground and the background is blurry.

Different sizes of vertical lines create interest.

Composition should also include point of view. Most pictures are taken from eye level, but your object will look way more interesting if you move your camera up or down. That is why I say that point of view is probably the most important aspect of photography. You may never think that an object is interesting until you think of a new point of view.

First, you need to decide if you are going to take your picture in landscape format or portrait format. Landscape format is another name for horizontal, and portrait is another name for vertical. Landscape format pictures are peaceful and harmonizing. Portrait format has a great sense of energy.

If you don’t know where to put your object in the frame, the rule of thirds works great. The rule of thirds is two imaginary lines going up and down and two going right and left. You should place your main subject in a box to the side. If your object is a person, you should have him looking towards the center box, but not be positioned in the center. This rule can be broken especially if you are doing the linear perspective. The linear perspective is when two or more lines seem to meet. The linear perspective looks great when an an object is placed at the end of the lines. The linear perspective is good for showing distance, too.

Grid showing the rule of thirds.

Rule of thirds provides more pleasing composition.

Other ways to show distance are the aerial perspective, overlapping form, and diminishing scale. The aerial perspective is when colors seem to fade in the distance; overlapping form is when objects overlap. And diminishing scale is when objects look smaller farther away. You should also think about the size of your object. If the size of your main subject will be ambiguous in the composition, you should put something in your picture to show how big the subject really is. However, you could also leave it ambiguous to create a mysterious composition. It is always good to cover-up something that is uninteresting or distracting in your composition if you can’t move it. This technique is called framing. Half framing is when you put an object very close up on half the picture and then have an object farther away in the other half.

Color

The yellow sweater draws your attention to the girl. This also demonstrates the rule of thirds.

Although color can be a part of composition, it is a big enough category to be by itself. Color and tone (the range from light to dark) create a feeling for your picture. Light tones for the most part are happy; dark tones are somber. You should also know that generally the primary light tone is yellow and primary dark tone is blue. Color combinations are the key to making a good color composition. Colors next to each other on the color wheel are harmonizing and are called harmony colors. And colors opposite on the color wheel have a sense of energy and are complementary to each other. Dark green and beige, navy blue and gray, and lavender and mauve are color combinations that are soothing to the eye. Colors are beautiful, but too many will create confusion and distraction. You should have a main color in your picture. The main color should stand out the most. Red and yellow have a stunning shine when they are put in dull backgrounds. Bright backgrounds will highlight neutral objects just like neutral backgrounds highlight bright objects.

Red, green and blue are the primary (starting) colors. All the other colors are made from combinations of them, so they are the brightest colors and attract the most attention. These three together make a good color composition. Red seems to advance towards the viewer and blue recedes. Monochromatic (one-color) backgrounds are perfect for showing textures and patterns. The calming background points right to the textures and patterns, making them show in a way primary colors wouldn’t.

The basic color wheel.

Color is in light, too. There’s color in artificial light and in natural light. You need to understand the colors in light when you photograph, because light colors will not look the same when you photograph them. First, I will tell you about the color of natural light. Light will show as true white best under a noon sun in a clear sky. If the sun is behind clouds or if there is fog, the light will have a bluish tint to it. The closer the sun is to the horizon, the yellower the light will get. Dust and low sun will diffuse light and reduce the contrast between the background and your subject. If your main subject is a person, make sure to take the picture in the shade. Direct overhead light will make shadows over the face. But be careful not to get too close to greenery because greenish tones will show on the person’s face.

Secondly, the colors of artificial light are especially tricky to work with. Each and every one has a different color and will affect the color in your picture. Incandescent bulbs show up as yellow/white, similar to early morning or late afternoon sun. Fluorescent bulbs appear greenish. Street lights have mercury bulbs in them and these will appear green/blue. Sodium vapor bulbs will have a yellow or red yellow light; tungsten, yellow/orange. An electric flash on the camera is true white light, and neon lights will show as what they appear to the eyes.

Light

Side- and back-lighting create fantasy.

Composing a picture and deciding on color are important for the photographer. Understanding light is also crucial for good photographs. How much light will enter the camera depends on two functions: aperture and shutter speed. Aperture is the size of the lens opening. Each aperture setting is called an f-stop. The standard settings range from f1.4 to f32. Every f-stop halves or doubles the light coming in. The smaller the number, the bigger the opening. Your aperture size will affect the range of focus. A small aperture (f22) will have a large range of focus. A large aperture (f1.4) will only allow the main object to be in focus. Shutter speed refers to how long the shutter stays open to let light enter the lens to shine on the film or sensor that captures the image. It is important to have the right combination of aperture and shutter speed to make sure that the picture will not be too dark or washed out. Sometimes, though, you should let part of your picture be washed out to get the right amount of light on your main subject.

Not only is the amount of light important but where the light is coming from is also crucial to a picture’s composition. There are four lighting positions: front lighting, top lighting, side lighting, and back lighting. Front and top lighting shines on what is facing the camera. These two work best outside. The advantage of them is that there are few shadows, but the disadvantage is the objects will look flat, especially natural objects like mountains. Side lighting is at a right angle to the camera. This kind of lighting will bring out textures and patterns. Back lighting is light coming towards the camera. It is good for portraits, still life, and the inside of architectural structures. Using this kind of lighting will make dramatic silhouettes, bringing out the form of your object.

Conclusion

Composition, color and lighting are the three main guiding posts in photography that I have explored and described. Recently, I have been experimenting with these in my own picture-taking. I only have a simple point-and-shoot digital camera, so I can’t do some of the fancier techniques like adjusting aperture and shutter speed. But I have been amazed at how many aspects of photography composition, color and lighting that I have been able to explore. It is fun learning how to organize the components of a photograph, to understand how colors harmonize, and to use different lighting to create a work of art. I encourage you to work and improvise with these ingredients to develop your own style and flair.

Below is a more complete slide show of 33 photographs of mine illustrating composition, color and lighting. The pictures change every 7 seconds, so you have time to read the captions and look at the pictures:

[portfolio_slideshow]

Bibliography

  1. Bavister, Steve. 2000. Digital Photography. NY: Sterling Publishing Co.
  2. Hedgecoe, John. 1978. The Art Of Color Photography. NY: Simon & Schuster.
  3. Jacobs Jr, Lou. 1991. Available Light Photography: How To Shoot Without Flash In All Kinds Of Light. NY: AM PHOTO.
  4. Rowinski, Tim & Kate. 1999. L.L. Bean Outdoor Photography Handbook. NY: The Lyons Press.
  5. Zuckerman, Jim. 1998. Jim Zuckerman’s Secrets Of Color In Photography. Cincinnati, OH: Writer’s Digest Books.

Forgotten Dreams

For school I had to write a story to a classical piece. I wrote to the song Forgotten Dreams by Leroy Anderson. (Music/video is below. Please read slowly.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAN5G_8oSyk

Walking through the old house, I looked back, remembering the times I had played in the parlor with all my toys. There was my old rag doll… and there my tea set, once shining, now lay cracked on the floor with my brother’s wooden car. Oh, how we all used to lay around the fireplace and listen to papa read the family bible every night. I remember the day he asked me to read the daily devotions. I was so excited, for it was a great honor. As I held the holy book in my hands, I read so all could hear, loud and clear.

There by the blackened stove was my mother’s cooking book 105 recipes all her own. She never let out a word to how she made her prize-winning apple pie or her famous raspberry tea. And there was her teapot, cracked and bent. She never would even consider getting a new one. Even when she won one, she gave it away saying that it would take too long to teach it how to boil. I remember the day she took me up in her arms holding the family’s diary and said in her sweet soft voice, “You must never ever let this out of the family. For it has too much history to lose.”

Oh…there beyond is the fountain. It seemed worn out without the bubbling water like it used to have. There is my garden. I remember all the cuts I got from the rosebush thorns. And there is the swing that I would sit on all day, escaping my studies. I felt like I could fly as I swung over the yard! And, uhhh…the bomb shelter. Why couldn’t mama get there before the planes darkened the sky?

She always said that she was proud of me, even when I got a C- on that silly class essay. And there is the wood shed that Emmy and I would go in and tell each other that there was a new boy in town or that one of the girls in school was losing her hair. We shared many secrets in that shed…sorrows and happinesses. And there is the necklace that Isaac gave me on Valentine’s Day. I shoved him in the mud but wore the necklace everyday since under my dress. When we were walking home one day, I let the necklace slip out of my dress just so he could see it.

I will never forget this place: once a bright and welcoming house, now an overgrown tangle of weeds covering up a box of magic. I guess I never let the diary out of our family…for it was in the house of the Montgomerys as it burned into ashes. I have come back, I think, to bring back the memories of the magical place…a place full of forgotten dreams.

The Boat That Believed

I wrote this paper about a year ago. I was supposed to write from the point of view of an object in a bible story. I wrote it for little kids to understand.

One day, in early AD, there was a little fishing boat. He was basking on the beach enjoying the lovely sun, when thirteen men approached him. He recognized some of them. One was his owner Peter, and the rest were Peter’s friends. Oh, how many day he had sailed the waters with Peter.

Now they were climbing into his slender body and sitting themselves on his smooth seats. Two men pushed him off the hot, soft sand into the cold, slimy water. He gave a great sigh of disappointment. He was hoping to have the day off from sailing. One of the men started talking. He talked on and on of a person called God and of the great wonders of him. When he finally stopped, he went to the back of the little boat and lay down. The little boat was tired too, but he kept on.

All of a sudden, the boat woke with a start. He had been sleeping for at least an hour! And in that time, a huge storm had come! All the men were still safe, but they wouldn’t be for long. Already giant waves were looming over them! He found it surprising that the man who had talked was still sleeping. As the first waves crashed, the boat spun. It took all his strength to keep them from flipping over! But wait, the men were shaking the sleeping man awake. He was standing up now. Slowly, as if he were walking through the garden on a summer day, he glided forward to the prow of the boat. He raised his hands, and shouted, “Peace!” And at that, one wave that had been about to crash over them flipped over backwards and sunk into the lake. Two seconds after that the sun came out. The storm was OVER!

All the men were astounded! How did he do that? Then the man spoke, “It is through the power of God that I have calmed the waves.” The little boat thought about what the man had said. He thought about what he had done. And from then on, he believed. There had been many believers before that little fishing boat, but he was the first believing boat.

Book Report

The Great and Terrible Quest by Margaret Lovett, published by Sonlight Curriculum, Ltd. in 2001 is exactly what the title is, for both the reader and the main character, Trad. Trad has lived a lowly life as the servant of his thieving, cruel grandfather. One day Trad finds an old, sick, and mysterious man. The man has lost his memory, but in one of his rages the man reveals that he is searching for the long lost Laughing Lord…The prince and the rightful heir to the thrown! Trad takes the sick man and runs away, taking with him a ring that has more power than he knows!

This is an exciting book from the beginning to the very last lines! Unlike most books, you are hooked on the first chapter. Who is the man? What does the ring mean? Even who is the little, kind boy? These are some questions you will be asking.

I think readers nine years and older would most enjoy this book. It is a fabulous medieval tale and perfect for a bedtime story. I loved this book, and it was a highlight in my school day. Once a day my imagination would soar as I went on the great and terrible quest!

Archeologists

For this assignment, I had to look up and write about different kinds of archeologists.

When you think of an archeologist, you probably think of people digging in the dirt for bones or ancient artifacts. But there are a lot of other jobs for archeologists. I will tell you about three.

Surprisingly, archeologists can work at zoos! What they do is design cages for the animals. This is not an easy job because they have to make sure the temperature is right, the light is on or off, the correct amount of water is in the cage, the cage is big enough, and the cage is tall or deep enough. Another thing archeologists can do at zoos is give tours and help visitors.

Archeologists can also work for the law. This kind of archeologist is called a forensic archeologist. They help especially in murders, but they can also work in other law related things. You might be wondering why  these are even called archeologists. Well, it’s because they dig through the evidence!

The most interesting job for an archeologist to me is a maritime archeologist. A maritime archeologist is a person who studies shipwrecks. They will scuba dive down, and swim in the ship to learn about other times and things! I love water and mysteries so this would be the perfect job for me.

There are many different kinds of archeologists that some people don’t even know exist! I learned a lot in this assignment. I hope you did too!