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While a lot of portrait photography will see the foreground subject in focus and background blurred, I love reversing this by framing my subject with a foreground blur. You can shoot on f2.8 or even f1.2 using the new prime lenses and really exaggerate the colour and shape of a foreground subject, using it to guide the viewer towards your intended focus.
#FOKUS PHOTO PRO#
I photograph with the Olympus range of M.Zuiko PRO lenses that are ideal for this technique as their large apertures help to produce a striking depth of field that separates the foreground from the subject with a gorgeous bokeh. It also helps you expand your photographic eye to seek out new subjects to work with and in no time you’ll start to hold flowers up to your lens, get into bushes and find new subjects to help frame your image and get the most out of your aperture and depth of field. Playing with foreground elements is a fun way to learn about depth of field and change up your images by introducing various tones, shapes and patterns into your shot.
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You can have a shallow or deep depth of field, which work almost the same way as aperture does, a shallow depth of field results in more background or foreground blur, separating your subject from the surroundings, whereas a deeper depth of field will see your entire image in focus and sharp. Aperture (f-stop), your focal length and the distance from your subject working together to create the depth of field. In short, it relates to the area of sharpness within your image, specifically the distance between the closest and furthest subjects in a photo that appears sharp and in focus. The way you see a scene is translated by your creative approach to framing a subject and there are a multitude of ways to produce something unique to your own vision, one of the best is using depth of field. Photography Tips – Depth of Field + the ForegroundĬomposition is one of the most important elements of photography.
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