PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPOSITION TECHNIQUES. First Part.

in #photography7 years ago

PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPOSITION TECHNIQUES

First Part

Talking about photographic composition techniques is a very exciting subject. This will be the first of a series of articles that I will be writing, in order to share the techniques that throughout my studies and dedication to photography I have been learning, experimenting, using and many other times deciding not to use, but always to awareness.

Knowing these techniques will make us build our images so that they are able to achieve a greater visual impact on the viewer, and above all, they will allow us to tell the story we want our photographs to transmit.

Like the painters, classical or modern, who knew precisely these techniques, photographers are in the duty to handle them. But eye!, in my case I like to call them techniques, in many other cases or photographers you will see what they say Laws or Rules of Composition, which suggests that they are unbreakable or obligatory to comply with. I believe that it is mandatory to know and test them, so that they become useful tools for the construction of our discourse as photographers and allow us to make images that speak. But surely the case will be presented, in which many times we want to not fulfill them, as in fact already many consecrated photographers do it. But always with responsibility and with conscience.

Undoubtedly one of the best ways to learn the Techniques of Composition is to study the masters of classical and modern painting, all possible genres and understand how they composed each of their works. After all, photographers are painters, only our ink is light.

In the next post, I will be sharing several of these techniques, with details and examples, such as:

Regla de Los Tercios
Ley of the Horizon
La Ley de la Mirada
Contrast
Simplicity
Rhythm
Symmetry
White and Black
Color
Use of the Lines
and others...

We read soon and we continue sharing this exciting world of photography.

(All the photographs of this post are of my authorship, taken in the Study of the Teacher Armando Villalón, painter Larense, Venezuela)

Alejandro Coutinho

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