Sunday, November 16, 2008

3. Vantage point is the key to Flatness – it can solve the picture more than compose one.

Post your Photographic example here:

9 comments:

Megan said...

http://www.tfaoi.com/cm/2cm/2cm385.jpg

vantage point really effects the flatness and clarifies the photo without allowing it to look chaotic, which it easily could. instead, this photo has a certain rhythm and resolved pattern which makes it beautiful.

Dana Gittings said...

http://www.footootjes.nl/Photography_Fisheye/005_SA2006_Schoolchildren1_665x465SS_fisheye_photography.JPG

bleecker said...

http://www.librarything.com/blog/uploaded_images/wickedwitch-780910.jpg

The vantage point in this photo causes you to begin at one point (the shoes) and travel into the rest of the photo, thus giving it longer dimensions in the sense of time and space.

Bartosz Zienda said...

http://k43.pbase.com/o4/67/655567/1/58408655.jamiedives_1.jpg

Giordano said...

http://photonews.blogsome.com/wp-admin/images/leroy.jpg

Juline said...

http://www.trinidaddreamscape.net/webpicsror/boatkeel1.jpg

Vantage point is the key to flatness because depending on where the photographer is in relation to the subject, a certain depth of field is created. In this example, the photographer shoots the picture nearly at eye level to capture the dimensions of the boat.

spranky said...

http://www.northlight-images.co.uk/content_images/photography_tour/bcg_2.jpg

Shauna said...

I actually am going to change my earlier post from the spatial hierarchy to here. I feel that this photograph better represents flatness because the perspective makes the land mountains and sky appear to be of equal distances. It creates a relationship between these three things.

http://river66.files.wordpress.com/2008/07/adamslargemoonrise.jpg

Katerina Traeger said...

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/81/Orr.jpg