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Our good friend JennyMac has an a cuter-than-cute son that we photographed last fall. See?
I know. The cuteness. Oh, the cuteness. He’s even more adorable …
Newer: Interns| 1st Month →
(Me and some of the interns photographed a fashion show last night at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens – pictured above from left to right – …
Weekly Newsletter Volume 12
I haven’t posted one of our weekly newsletters as an actual blog post before – but this one was so much fun (drawing on photos!) and a little informative as far as what’s in our heads when we take photos – so here you go in case you haven’t signed up for our newsletter! (Which you can do Right Here.)
LeahAndMark.com
Atlanta photographers
Lines, Shapes, and Composition
I know. Composition. Again – but look! This time we have drawings - sort of
We both take photos, but Mark is a natural at “seeing” the shot he wants. Leah – not so much. But composition can be learned. So once we realized this difference between us, we decided Mark should teach y’all some of his inner workings.
This is how Mark sees the world – even when he doesn’t have his camera:
Basically – straight lines framing or accenting/contrasting/stressing the shape of curved human bodies. I first started seeing things like this when I took an art history class and saw this painting by Parmigianino:
Of course – there is more than one way to view any piece of art:
Now it’s one thing to compose a shot when you have time – but it’s another thing to be able to do it on-the-fly, during an event, when people keep moving:
Rarely do we take shots that are just ‘off to the side’ or at some weak diagonal angle. We’re very big on getting in position to get THE SHOT. Sometimes it’s just a foot to the left, sometimes we need to move across the room – but we rarely ‘settle’ for a shot due to our position. When we enter a room – we see the space, the lines and the available shapes (yes, even Leah can do this now – it just took some more practice for her). They stand out to us. Then we see people and where they’re moving within the space and the lines.
We try to always ‘ground’ our photos of people with strong lines and shapes. That’s the most simple way I can put it. It’s a formula we use – but people aren’t formulaic – so it works. They’re not static, even when our ‘framing’ IS static, and when you combine them, you tend to end up with strong photos that just ‘work’ – even if you don’t really know why, or spend the time to wax poetic and draw red lines all over them.
Knowing your lines and shapes, and using them to effectively direct the viewer and balance out your composition, will help differentiate you from everyone else with an expensive camera. Look at the whole picture.
See you next week.
Thanks for reading.
Sincerely,
Leah and Mark Tioxon
LeahAndMark.com
Atlanta. Photographer. Children. Family. Portrait. Photography.