Basics Photography 01: Composition 2940373043, 9782940373048


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Table of contents :
Title Pages......Page 2
Copyright......Page 3
Contents......Page 5
How to get the most out of this book......Page 7
Introduction......Page 9
Basics......Page 11
The case for composition......Page 13
The rules......Page 20
Viewpoint......Page 27
Perspective......Page 29
Scale......Page 36
Formal elements......Page 37
Point......Page 39
Line......Page 45
Shape......Page 55
Form......Page 61
Texture......Page 68
Pattern......Page 74
Tone......Page 75
Colour......Page 81
Organising space......Page 93
Frames......Page 95
Balance......Page 114
Appearance of space......Page 120
Organising time......Page 125
Time passing......Page 128
Moments......Page 129
The decisive moment......Page 132
Sequences......Page 133
Application......Page 135
Landscape......Page 138
Still life......Page 139
Potrait......Page 141
Documentary......Page 144
Figure......Page 145
Action/Sports......Page 148
Fine art......Page 150
Advertising......Page 151
Originality......Page 153
Developing your own view......Page 156
Contrasts......Page 161
Imbalance......Page 163
Cropping......Page 166
Colour......Page 167
Digital imaging......Page 169
Conclusion......Page 173
Contacts......Page 174
Glossary......Page 175
Acknowledgements and credits......Page 177
Back Cover......Page 178
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BASICS Photography 01

David Präkel

COMPOSITION n giving form by putting together or combining various elements, parts or ingredients

BASICS Photography 01

David Präkel

COMPOSITION

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An AVA Book Published by AVA Publishing SA Rue des Fontenailles 16 Case Postale 1000 Lausanne 6 Switzerland Tel: +41 786 005 109 Email: [email protected] Distributed by Thames & Hudson (ex-North America) 181a High Holborn London WC1V 7QX United Kingdom Tel: +44 20 7845 5000 Fax: +44 20 7845 5055 Email: [email protected] www.thamesandhudson.com Distributed in the USA & Canada by: Ingram Publisher Services Inc. 1 Ingram Blvd. La Vergne, TN 37086 USA Tel: +1 866 400 5351 Fax: +1 800 838 1149 Email: [email protected] English Language Support Office AVA Publishing (UK) Ltd. Tel: +44 1903 204 455 Email: [email protected] Copyright © AVA Publishing SA 2006 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without permission of the copyright holder. ISBN 978-2-940373-04-8 10 9 8 7 6 5 Design by Gavin Ambrose (www.gavinambrose.co.uk) Cover image by Nina Indset Andersen Production by AVA Book Production Pte. Ltd., Singapore Tel: +65 6334 8173 Fax: +65 6259 9830 Email: [email protected] All reasonable attempts have been made to trace, clear and credit the copyright holders of the images reproduced in this book. However, if any credits have been inadvertently omitted, the publisher will endeavour to incorporate amendments in future editions.

Binette 12 This portrait by Nana Sousa Dias is composed very simply to emphasise the beautiful, bold, graphic shape, texture and lighting of the subject's features. Photographer: Nana Sousa Dias. Technical summary: Pentax 645 with Pentax 135mm macro lens, 1/60 sec at f22,llford HP5 Plus, lit by Multiblitz

Magnolite 32 flash-head with 1m square safIbox.

How to get the most out of this book Introduction

6

Basics The case for composition The rules Viewpoint Perspective Scale

36

10

12 18 26 28 34

Fonnal elements Point Une Shape Form Texture Pattem Tone Colour

8

38 44 54

60 66 72 74 80

Organising space 92 Frames 94 Balance 112 Appearance of space 118

·

. ,

Organising time

124

Application

134

Originality

152

Time passing Momenls The decisive moment Sequences

126 128

Landscape

136 138 140 142 144 146 148 150

Developing your own view Contrasts Imbalance Cropping Colour Digital imaging

154 160 162 164 166 168

130 132

81i11life Portrait Documentary Figure Action/sports Fine art Advertising

Conclusion Contacts Glossary Acknowledgements and credits

172 173 174 176

How to get the most out of this book D

This book features dedicated chapters explaining the process of composition, its formal elements and how space and time are organised in photographic images. It is illustrated throughout with classic images from the masters of photography, and creative images – some taken especially for this book – from contemporary practitioners. Later chapters look at how techniques of composition can be applied in real-world situations and used to create a personal style. Each key idea is isolated, examined and explained in context.

Main chapter pages

Headings

These offer a précis of the basic

Each important concept is shown

concepts that will be discussed

in the heading at the top of each spread to enable readers to refer quickly to a topic of interest.

Introduction Composition is a process of organising space. All photographic imaging starts with selection, but before the photographer even thinks about a subject, he or she must give consideration to the proportions of the frame that will contain it. There are various film and digital formats and choice of aspect ratios of frames. The frame of the image can be horizontal (landscape), vertical (portrait), square or panoramic, the latter offering the photographer a particular challenge with composition. Having selected a subject, the photographer needs to know where the subject is best placed in the frame and how big it should be – as both position and size have a major influence on how the viewer will read the image. The advantages of composing images in the camera over cropping later in image-manipulation software are many. Composing in advance requires more skill and creativity. The photographer must look at both the balance of all the formal elements and the foreground-to-background balance. We’ll look at the problems of symmetry and the pitfalls of the perfectly balanced image – in addition to related notions of symmetry, beauty and the human face – in more detail in the next few pages. Selective focus and the use of lens aperture is another aspect of the compositional process for consideration as they give photographers control over which part of their image appears in sharp focus – a feature unique to photography. Sharpness, by convention, signifies the importance of the subject. Again, we’ll look in more detail at focus, the quality of out-offocus areas of the image and the use of depth of field and hyperfocal focusing to maximise sharpness.

Cityscape (facing opposite) In his cityscape images Zaferis says he is trying to capture the ‘unseen’. This image at first presents a void between the near barrier of the yellow parking lines and the distant monument and its temporary red plastic fence. These elements ‘hold open’ a space that only on further investigation reveals intriguing textures. Photographer: Sotiris Zaferis. Technical summary:

Introductory images

Introductions

Introductory images give a visual

Special section introductions

indication of the context for

outline basic concepts that will

each chapter.

be discussed.

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The pertinent thoughts

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and comments of famous phoiograpI1ern, artists and

photographic convnentators.

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chosen to illustrate the principles under cIscussion.

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