Framing


To frame: to arrange or adjust for a purpose.
A practice that constantly challenges and helps me improve my Photography is the attention to framing. If Photography is visual storytelling, then framing is a form of editing on the spot. When I point the camera at a scene, I try to ask myself two questions every single time: "What kind of a story am I trying to tell?" and "What part of this scene is absolutely necessary to tell this particular story?" Ever since I started playing with that, I noticed patterns in my ways of seeing and (I think) I began to develop a stronger point of view and style. For example, I learned that one of my favorite things to do is zoom in and crop body parts, with the intention of adding a tiny mystery to the image and just a hint of a story.
How about you? Any framing ideas to share? Show us how you edit what you see.
Reader Comments (14)
Si
http://fightingwindmills.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/drinking-it-all-in/
i like how this one was framed brown fuzzy snow suit against the snow
http://artcetera.squarespace.com/artcetera/2009/12/5/view-05-possibilities.html
http://www.flickr.com/photos/22634402@N02/4163227972/
http://pkphotography.us/2009/12/look-at-those-eyes/
I try to keep the tones monochromatic with a hint of the opposite on the colour wheel...like you I try to focus on one thing and let the rest blur out.
Sometimes I achieve this and sometimes I don't. But it is a fun process regardless.
I do think less is more in a photo. Cramming too much in doesn't work!
xox