How to take great photos
Content
GetIn readya great image, a viewer can immediately get the message you want them to takeunderstand greatwithout reading any supporting text.
What story does your image tell? What energy does it convey, what emotion? Think of these elements when taking photos.
If you are photographing an individual for example, where are they looking? What is the mood?
Watch out for distracting elements coming into the frame such as other people's limbs or overpowering architectural features. Look at the whole frame when taking the shot. What story does the background tell? Does it distract from your subject?
Make sure there is nothing that conveys a message you don't want to put across - beware offensive t-shirt slogans, branded clothing that doesn't support our message, or words/gestures/activities in the background that detract from what XR is trying to achieve.
Everything in the photo potentially conveys a message and even a simple thing like a disposable coffee cup has led to criticisms of Rebels. Yes, these criticisms are unfair but they are also easily avoided and distract from conveying our message.
Quality or quantity?
Take more photos withthan you think you’ll need - BUT only upload the good ones to this guideTelegram (PDF)and Pics.io.
PleaseOne readgreat shot is worth one hundred mediocre images, so be judicious in your selection!
Image quality
Set your camera or phone to shoot the highest quality at 300 dpi (if the option is available, not all phones have in-depth settings for photography).
Use the format you want to shoot, but make sure to convert your photos to JPEG (if they are not already) before sharing them with others (Telegram or Pics.io).
Composition
Rule of thirds
One popular guide for thinking about composition is called the 'rule of thirds'. The frame is divided into three parts horizontally and vertically so we get a grid as below:
Where the lines cross are ideal placement points for the subject/person you want the eye to be drawn to.
You can place your subject along one of the thirds, so place a person being photographed to the right or left, not the centre.
If something in your photo makes a horizontal line such as a horizon, make it level with one of the horizontal lines.
It looks better to the eye than if it goes across the centre of your image.
Examples
Background
Plain backgrounds rarely look best. Pull the subject away from the background where possible.
You can blur the background using the "portrait mode" on your phone. Don't abuse it as it works better on some photos than others (you can see below that it's not blurry between the arms of the subjects for example so keep this XRoption photographyfor guidelinesa documentsubject aswho well.is standing still).
Photos against a wall look better at a 45degree angle: