Tips for Improving Your Photography Skills
Capturing your walking holiday on camera is a great way to create a lifelong souvenir. We have a few tips for making the most of the glorious landscapes around you.
Tips for Improving Your Photography Skills
https://contoursrun.co.uk/photography-on-your-walk
by Cass Jenks
Our photo competition is open again for submissions all the way through into winter, and it’s the perfect excuse to try your hand at photography. Take your camera out on the trails to immortalize your walk and perhaps earn a voucher or two! These hints and tips may help you frame the perfect picture.
It’s no secret that walking the trails surrounds us in natural beauty. Gorgeous vistas stretch out on every side, tempting the camera lens in every direction. Overwhelmed by all these potential shots and by the sense of envelopment in nature that we often want to capture, it’s easy to start taking photographs of everything – but for a great picture, focus is key.
When setting up a shot, ask yourself this critical question: what is the subject of your photograph?
Which object ahead of you matters most? This could be as straightforward as a bird perched on a stile, or it could be a particular tree there in the distance that provides a sense of scale for the vast hills you want to capture.
Once you know just what your subject is, it’s time to think about framing.
One good way to present your subject is to imagine a grid overlaid on the scene you wish to capture.
Split into three: grid lines guide composition in Suzy West’s submission for the 2014 competition
Place your subject where the grid lines intersect for a well-balanced photograph. In Suzy West’s photo, both the phone box and the flowers are accentuated by these intersections.
Some cameras can be set up to display these lines through the viewfinder – so you can use them as guidelines to keep horizons level and any vertical objects standing straight, too. Try to make sure the horizon is off-centre to avoid cutting your photo in two.
If you’re framing, say, a walker on a path, you’ll give the viewer the best sense of where that person is walking to if you leave more space ahead of them than behind. Someone facing or moving in a particular direction will naturally draw the eye in the same way, so take advantage of this to lead the viewer across your photo, rather than off it.
Facing ahead: Marianne Engelshove’s photo shows rolling green fields opening up ahead of the walker - the perfect scenario, in our experience.
On the subject of directing the viewer’s gaze across the picture, the same can be done with strong lines. Paths, walls and fences are excellent candidates while you’re out on your walking holiday. Don’t discount strong curves in the landscape, either.
Lines in architecture: Luc Tremblay uses the lines of the rooftops and the road to guide the eye all the way down the road.
Keeping the above in mind for composition, here are a few more tips to help perfect your photograph:
Of course, the very best tip is simply this: look at and take lots of photos! Any walking holiday will provide endless opportunity for beautiful photos, and it's always practice that pays off the most.
We look forward to seeing all your entries for this year’s photo competition.
Marketing and Strategy Consultant
Writer, editor and Google-wrangler at Contours Holidays, Cass spends each weekend on the trails, walking the dog or plummeting downhill along Wales’ best mountain biking tracks.