The Power of Perspective in Photography
The power of photography is a very complex and
important concept – one that can be incredibly helpful through work and life.
It also means different things to different people, as we’ve been revealing throughout
this webinar. It’s our view that the power of photography has extraordinary
potential and is underutilized in today's ever changing world. To best grow and
learn as a photographer or someone who utilizes photography; it can be
incredibly useful to get a broad and pragmatic perspective of what has come
before. There’s a saying by a former teacher I had, I can’t teach you anything
you can’t learn on your own. What I can do is save you time.This
knowledge can help immensely. How you shoot a scene determines what kind of
story you want to tell and what kind of mood you want viewers to feel when they
look at a photo. The power of perspective is beyond the consideration of your
photography subjects; it is about the angle of your camera, your proximity to
the subjects and what you include in the frame that plays an important role in
your final image. Every single day millions of people document aspects of their
lives important or mundane onto social media sites like Instagram.
Photography makes it possible to instantly capture moments of your life forever.
http://digital-photography-school.com/power-perspective-photography/
http://photowings.org/pwau-power-of-photography/
http://photowings.org/pwau-power-of-photography/
I stopped reading after the third post, due to the overwhelming ammount of plagiraism that I detected. At a glance, many of your other posts have plagiarism as well. Please fix this ASAP.
ReplyDeleteConstructively for the first 2 posts:
- Some spelling / grammar issues. (Wrong tenses, capitalization, photograph vs photography,
Proof doesn’t always support your arguments. (ex. You never explained why a smart phone camera creates inferior pictures.)
- Some run-on / awkward sentences where too many ideas are caught in just a single sentence.
- Some spacing issues. Several of your pictures have large white spaces underneath. It makes your blog look a little less professional.
- I’m not sure what you mean by certain phrases. (ex. “They filled their own names in the blank.”)
Well, interesting story but I woud want to ask you about taking photographs, does it mean a high level of studies to get a job? Because some people who did not go to school are taking good photos than those who went to school.
ReplyDeletei think i have read this somewhere else but photography is amazing and its crazy how alot of people can express themseleves by doing it
ReplyDelete