Design Principles for PhotographyRoutledge, 11 Sep 2020 - 226 halaman In an age over-saturated with photographic imagery, Design Principles for Photography demonstrates how design awareness can add a new level of depth to your images. By adapting and experimenting with the tried and tested techniques used by graphic designers every day, you can add dynamism and impact to your imagery, whatever the style or genre - something that today's editors, curators and publishers are all crying out for.The second edition includes examples of unsuccessful compositions, annotated images highlighting key techniques and an expanded glossary. There’s also a new section on movements in photography and their reflection in composition, including modernism, expressionism, and surrealism and interviews with international practitioners discussing how they’ve included design principles in their work. Featured topics: Basic design theory; the use of space; positional decisions; the elements of design; line; shape or form; space; texture; light; colour; pattern; rhythm; contrast; scale and proportion; abstraction; movement and flow; containment; emphasis and emotion; justaposition; incongruity; mood and emotion. |
Isi
Introduction | |
1 Basic design theory | |
2 The elements of design | |
3 First design principles | |
4 Depth and scale | |
5 Movement and flow | |
6 Emphasis and emotion | |
7 Putting it all together | |
Conclusion | |
Glossary | |
Acknowledgements and picture credits | |
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abstract image achieve advertising allows the photographer angle appear apply approach areas Arnold Newman artistic audience background black and white camera capture colour wheel composition concepts conceptual photography contrast create creative curved deliberately depth of field design elements design principles detail diagonal lines digital image digital image editing distance edges effect emotional emphasize environment example explore exposure film fisheye lens focus foreground frame Golden Ratio Henri Cartier-Bresson horizontal ideas imagery impact incongruous iPhone Jeremy Webb juxtaposition landscape layers lens aperture lenses light look manipulation medium Michael Kenna movement Nick Knight pattern photographer's Photographic genres photographic image Photojournalism Photoshop Pictorialist placed point of interest portrait position relationship reveal Rule of Thirds scale scene shadows shoot shutter speeds simply single element smartphones soft Source/photographer space style symbols techniques texture themes Title tones vertical viewer viewfinder viewpoint visual
