I have a distinct childhood memory related to
photography. On family vacations my dad often wanted my sister and me to pose
in his landscape shots and I remember thinking "Why does he
always want to ruin this beautiful waterfall/mountain/nature picture by
including us in it?". Although it took me a while to come to this
realization, I now see that my dad was onto something. At times, adding people to a
more a typical landscape/cityscape shot can turn a ho-hum photo into
something much more interesting. Here are three situations where including people can be in the right decision (with
examples from a recent Portugal trip):
If you want to increase depth by adding a
foreground
Strong landscape shots include not only a mid-ground and background, but also something of interest in the foreground. The photo on the left of Lisbon was lacking a foreground, which I was able to remedy by including Maelle and Pearce in the shot.
If you are missing a strong focal point
The mosaic tiles in Portugal are eye-catching, so when I noticed a dramatic wall covered in tiles in a small alley in the town of Fuseta I knew I wanted to capture it. After taking my first picture on the left, I felt like it was missing a focal point and wasn't as interesting as I had hoped. In the second picture Maelle and Pearce act as a point of interest to draw the viewer's eyes down the alley.
If you want to provide a sense of scale
When photographing large objects, it can be sometimes be difficult for the viewer to truly understand the size and scale of the scene. If you give the viewer a point of reference and include something familiar in the shot (as I did below with Maelle and Pearce), it can help to convey the grandeur of the landscape shot.
So the next time you're on vacation silently cursing how busy the tourist spot is because you can't take a photo without any distracting people in the shot (I've done this too many times to count) stop and consider if including people will add to, as opposed to detract from, the photo.
Here are are a few more of my favourite (people and non-people) photos from Portugal:
Here are are a few more of my favourite (people and non-people) photos from Portugal:
You have some real winners here ... in fact, they all are. You are one good photographer. We should compare our tile and far distance shots as I have several with K and W providing focal points. Not as good, or as well thought out, though.
ReplyDeleteThe silhouette of Maelle is just perfect!
Kira, I'm just looking at your blog again for the first time in a while - your photos have always been great, but these are really special! Maelle is just too cute! Rhonda
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