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How would a photograph be different than an artist’s drawing or painting of an event?
Why was photographing dead bodies so popular in the 1800s?
What is the difference between “making” a picture and “taking” a picture?
What is the Rule of Thirds?
What is the difference between the focal point and framing?
Answers
Answer:
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Explanation:
A photograph reproduces what the camera sees (unless it is edited). A painting does not reproduce the scene. Rather it presents the artist's interpretation of the scene. ... You point the camera, press a button, and get an image.
Photographs of loved ones taken after they died may seem morbid to modern sensibilities. But in Victorian England, they became a way of commemorating the dead and blunting the sharpness of grief. ... Victorian life was suffused with death.
To “take” a photograph of someone is to steal their soul. However, on the other hand, to “make” a photograph is to create something beautiful, and to be creative. I also like the idea of “making” a photograph because it sounds more collaborative.
The rule of thirds is a composition guideline that places your subject in the left or right third of an image, leaving the other two thirds more open. ... It's called the rule of thirds, but you can think of it as giving you four crosshairs with which to target a shot's important elements.
Focal points are visually strong and draw the eye. Framing mechanisms are often used on either side of a focal point to frame it, and enhance it as the eye's natural resting place. Focal points often become smaller at the top.
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