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Snap Shots: by Harry Flashman
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Kids can take photos too
There
is an unfortunate tendency to think that children cannot take good photographs.
This is wrong. Children can, and do, take good shots.
With every child and the neighbor’s dog having a smart phone these days that can
take photographs, there is the starting point for the young photographers.
However, please make sure they are using the phone’s camera to record something
other than “selfies”.
So, if you are teaching your children to take photographs, the first lesson is
to get them to take several shots of the same subject, but vary the approach.
Shoot in landscape format and portrait formats. Shoot from above, low down and
central positions. If possible, with your camera, use different lenses or at
different extremes of a zoom lens.
Backgrounds can make or break a photograph. Teach your children to look at the
background as well as at the subject. Backgrounds do not add to a shot, but they
have the ability to ruin a shot. How many photographs have you made with trees
growing out of people’s heads?
Another problem which shows up with many new photographers is the horizon line
being off at a drunken angle. Teach your children to look critically at the
framing of the shot before squeezing the shutter button. And after, when
reviewing the shot in the LCD, to take it again if the horizon is skewed.
Teach your children how to hold a camera with two hands and none of this
one-handed approach while waving three fingers with the other and saying “Nung,
song, sam”. Despite anti-shake technology, there is a limit!
For me, one of the first ‘rules’ for photography is to Move In Closer. Make the
subject fill the frame. In other words, make the subject the obvious ‘hero’ and
your child will get better photos.
Another factor to teach is that when illustrating a school outing, for example,
they will need to show where they went, as well as their class mates who went on
the trip. This is also a time to take plenty of shots, but not 100 shots all the
same!
It is important for your child to understand that good photographs are ‘made’,
they just don’t happen. To sparkle up their shots, look for points of interest
to include in the viewfinder. Then work out how to really use that point of
interest in the shot. This may require shifting position, but is worthwhile.
No lessons on photography can go by without mentioning the Rule of Thirds.
Placing the hero at the intersection of thirds can be a little hard for
youngsters to understand, but even to show them to place the subject off-center
can be enough.
Provided your child is a teenager, he or she is old enough to be taught the
different ‘modes’ offered by almost all digital cameras these days. This
includes ‘Portrait’, ‘Sports’, ‘Flash’ and ‘Fireworks’ and many others. Teach
them that modes just take some of the mechanical/optical steps away from the
photographer and uses the automatic functions in the camera instead. However,
the modes do not signify the only way to take a sports photograph, for example.
Just as their teachers grade school homework, sit down with your budding
photographer and discuss their images. Get them to understand which shots are
good, and which are not so good, and why.
One of the most important items for new photographers is a small notebook and
pencil. Teach your children to make notes as to the camera settings they are
using for every shot. Then while going through the shots with them you can see
areas where they can improve over the settings they used to take the shot. But
with no notebook, both of you are flying blind.
Older children can be introduced to the basics of exposure values, using the
Aperture Priority mode and the Shutter priority mode, and the concept of ISO
ratings. They can then take shots moving between the three variables and have a
very practical lesson in how these affect the final images.
Photography is a good hobby for children and teaches them to think and look
critically at their own images. Just stop them from taking “selfies” and what
they ate.
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