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Silhouette Photo Tips and Techniques
Author : Trisha Leung
Many
photographers probably have stared at a
silhouette image and pondered to themselves
how exactly it had been taken and composed.
Silhouette images could contain a couple
looking at a sunset, a cityscape with the
sun shining through buildings, or just a
normal horizon. In order to get an effective
silhouette image, a photographer must be in
the right place at the right time and have
the right exposure settings.
-Silhouette
Definition
In the area
of photography, a silhouette is defined as
an outline that appears dark against a light
background. More specifically, it is where
your subject appears as a plain black shape
against a brighter background. It is an
artistic photography expression that many
photographers like to refine and perfect in
their images. This effect can be achieved
with any bright light source with the sun
being the most common. In a sunset
silhouette photo, the sunlight in the
background is exposed correctly forcing
everything else in the photo to be
underexposed causing the effect.
-Silhouette
Techniques
When you are
preparing to take a silhouette image, there
are many things to keep in mind. These tips
are equally effective for both digital and
film photography. First of all, you need to
make sure that there is not too much light
on your subject, even if it is being
reflected on to your subject the stray light
will ruin the effect. If there is not enough
light in the background, your subject will
appear grey instead of black. The effect is
just multiplied when you have multiple
colors of bright lights in the background.
Some photographers focus on artificial
lights, others focus on the sun at certain
times of the day, the possibilities are
endless.
-My
Silhouette Tips and Techniques
I usually
take my silhouette images when the sun is
just above the horizon. I prefer the time
around sunset because the sun causes the sky
to be brighter than everything else for
greater contrast. Another technique I use is
to align the sun directly behind the subject
so it causes a glow effect around the main
subject. I usually use a relatively big
subject so it creates a more drastic effect
then a small insignificant subject.
I always use
a narrow aperture (high f/stop) so the
camera captures the whole scene with a high
depth of field so everything is in focus. I
usually use the aperture manual mode on my
camera so I can control what the aperture
will be and then the camera automatically
selects the right shutter speed necessary
for the photo. If you are trying to create
the effect with a point-and-shoot camera
make sure you compose the photo with the
background light by pointing the camera at
the background. If you compose the image by
pointing the camera at your dark subject,
then the background will be over-exposed and
you will not end up with a silhouette.
There is no
exact science to taking a great silhouette
image. It will take practice, luck, and
experience to capture truly amazing
silhouette images. So keep practicing.
Trisha Leung
is a digital photography enthusiast and
regularly submits articles to
http://www.picturecorrect.com/ which
offers tips and news about digital
photography, digital camera reviews,
photoshop tutorials and computer wallpaper.
Article source:
www.anyarticles.com
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