MtDew4U7
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1WolfPhotography
April 06, 2018
Very interesting capture. I am a fan of tunnels and dark shadowy photos.
You could shoot this several ways. I always encourage my students to "SHOOT AROUND THE SUBJECT" This just means get several different perspectives.
So Symmetry in Composition is really fun and I know that not all the time are we able to get in the center of the Road or River to get that shot but where we can we should try.
Shoot from a LOWER perspective Shoot from a Higher Perspective. Shoot from the Left Shoot From the Right.
There are natural Leading Lines in this structure so allowing those lines to lead the viewers through the frame is good.
The Problem I have with this shot is the extreme Highlight in at the end of the Tunnel... My suggestion is to meter for that Light spot and then try and recover the Dark areas in Post processing ... OR use a ND filter to compensate.
When a person looks at a Photo the eyes tend to go to the brightest spot and this is blinding. unfortunately the rest of the photo is lost.
Let your photo be a Journey.. Start from the closest edge and walk through the photo use composition to guide your audience... They will eventually get to the end of the tunnel.
Good Luck
You could shoot this several ways. I always encourage my students to "SHOOT AROUND THE SUBJECT" This just means get several different perspectives.
So Symmetry in Composition is really fun and I know that not all the time are we able to get in the center of the Road or River to get that shot but where we can we should try.
Shoot from a LOWER perspective Shoot from a Higher Perspective. Shoot from the Left Shoot From the Right.
There are natural Leading Lines in this structure so allowing those lines to lead the viewers through the frame is good.
The Problem I have with this shot is the extreme Highlight in at the end of the Tunnel... My suggestion is to meter for that Light spot and then try and recover the Dark areas in Post processing ... OR use a ND filter to compensate.
When a person looks at a Photo the eyes tend to go to the brightest spot and this is blinding. unfortunately the rest of the photo is lost.
Let your photo be a Journey.. Start from the closest edge and walk through the photo use composition to guide your audience... They will eventually get to the end of the tunnel.
Good Luck
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