Coursework: Photographing landscape photography. Photography hack: Capturing beautiful landscapes A creative approach to landscape photography

05.05.2021

The famous American photographer Ansel Adams, who became famous all over the world for his black and white landscape shots, once said: “Landscape photography is the main test for the photographer and often his main disappointment.” And this, perhaps, is the truth. How often we, noticing a beautiful view, believe that it is enough just to start on the shutter button, capture what we see - and you will get a masterpiece. However, a masterpiece most often does not work out, because in a landscape photographer it is not enough to be just a mirror for nature, he must learn to express himself through the landscape.

Photographer Declan O'Neil shared his 10 secrets to creating expressive landscape photos.


1. What can you say about the landscape through photography?

It takes time to read and understand the landscape. You just have to stand and watch how the light changes contours and shapes. As the sun moves, forests and rivers are illuminated every minute in a completely new way and sometimes completely transformed. Light creates its own mood and emotion in the landscape. The landscape can be compared to a huge canvas on which light paints its complex and amazing picture.

In this case, photography is about capturing how light transforms a landscape. Therefore, the decision about what to photograph and what composition to build should be dictated by the question: “Does this photograph say something about light and landscape?” This simple question helps to reject a lot of losing and empty compositions and choose the one that is perfect.


2. Learn to get up early!

If I have a choice between sunrise and sunset, I always choose sunrise. I have nothing against sunset photos, but I find it difficult to add something new and original to the thousands of sunset shots that I have already seen. Dawn light, on the contrary, always brings surprises! It is very difficult to predict what exactly you will receive while you stand and wait in the predawn darkness.

It's kind of like taking pictures of wild animals - because you can get the shot you've always dreamed of, or get none at all. Dawn light can be completely different - from smoky pink to warm yellow.

Keep an eye on the weather forecasts - because if you happen to live in areas with cold nights and clear skies, you can sometimes catch amazing cloud and haze effects that are sure to clear by the time the rest of the world wakes up.


3. Imperfection is good.

One of the main difficulties landscape photography is that you have to deal with a huge dynamic range. This makes it very difficult to control the balance of light in the frame. ND filters sometimes help, but are often inconvenient or inappropriate for a particular place and time. Sometimes you have to completely abandon shooting due to too large a dynamic range.

You can, of course, use HDR technologies, but they most often give themselves away and can violate the integrity and honesty of the image. Many images can be light balanced when processed on a computer. However, sometimes photography only benefits from not being able to capture the full dynamic range. Most likely, such a photo will not be accepted for participation in various competitions, and for sure there will be sections in it from which it will be impossible to isolate at least some details. Perhaps, technically, the photo will turn out to be very poor, but a black silhouette on a light background very often unimaginably attracts attention to itself and seems to call for a closer look. Sometimes you have to give up the opportunity to capture a perfectly lit shot in order to draw attention to the potential of the subject itself.


4. Look back!

It's so easy to see the winning shot and forget to look around. Watching a sunset or sunrise, people usually point their lenses towards the sun and again take thousands of pictures, millions of which they have already seen from their friends or on the Internet. However, often it is enough just to look back to see something completely new and missed by everyone! After all, instead of photographing the rising or setting sun, you can capture what it illuminates at that moment.

The obvious shot is not always the best. Learn to look carefully.


5. Use planning software.

There are many programs that can help you when shooting outdoors. Perhaps one of the more useful ones is The Photographers Ephemeris. In short, it allows you to select any location on the planet - and shows you where the sun will be on any given day and at any particular time. In this way, you can choose the best day and time to shoot in a certain location and choose a specific shooting point with the most advantageous lighting. If you're serious about landscape photography, this is the tool you need.


Another tool that can help you a lot is a terrain map. A good map will help you predict what the landscape will look like and give you some idea of ​​what will be in your field of vision. The ability to understand these detailed topographic maps will help you save a lot of time and not travel around the area in search of that very - perfect shooting point!


6. Equipment is not that important.

The best equipment doesn't guarantee you the best pictures, just as the best pen won't automatically let you write that great novel you've always dreamed of. The equipment is just a device that allows you to convey to others what is in your head. If you have your own opinion and if you have something to say (see point 1) - then you can use anything from a smartphone to Nikon D800.

Remember that it is you who is composing your future shot, and the camera is just capturing it. More megapixels or a faster lens will never help you make a composition more expressive and full.


7. Don't try to "paint" the landscape with your camera.

In the Internet recent times photographs that have gone through the strongest post-processing or created using ND filters that make water look like smooth silk are becoming more and more fashionable. Why not let nature express itself naturally? Believe me, she knows how to do it perfectly and without the use of all sorts of filters. The same goes for post-processing. If used sparingly, it helps to emphasize the natural beauty of nature, if overused - we are already starting to change the landscape and paint it completely different from what it really was.

Real photographs always leave their mark on our consciousness and subconsciousness. This is why heavily photoshopped, idealized images of landscapes often leave us cold. They tell fictional, not real story. We immediately notice the false orange sky and the oversaturated color of the grass. Photos can be metaphors, but they should be metaphors that appear in the mind of the viewer, not in the imagination of the photographer.

If you still want to convey your vision of how the landscape looked - perhaps you should try your hand at drawing?


8. Bad weather is good weather.

Clouds and rain are not the most inspiring weather conditions, but they bring with them opportunities much more interesting than any cloudless day. It takes patience and optimism to walk with a camera in the rain all day, but more often than not, you will be rewarded. If you look around carefully, you will certainly find amazing shots created by clouds and rain!

Although at first glance landscape photography may seem very simple, in fact it is much more than “point the camera - click the shutter”. The goal of landscape photography is to convey an inner state, to express something more, and not just to show the landscape in front of you.

We see reality every day. That is why, in my opinion, landscape photography should not simply reproduce it. Objects should not be in front of the viewer or occupy the entire photo: the composition should lead the eye to the final point of the picture - the point of interest, your subject.

Like any other art form, landscape photography has its own rules. It takes a lot of time to master the lighting, composition, subject selection, post-processing, and the final results will vary from person to person.

There are plenty of videos out there with tips and ideas on this topic, but the bottom line is that it doesn't matter unless you go out and start taking as many photos as possible every day to understand what works and what doesn't.

These are 25 tips and ideas for landscape photography. I hope you find them useful (details about each of them are in the video):

1. Shoot the same subject at sunrise and sunset. Different light, different angles, completely different results.

2. A low-angle shot changes the perspective dramatically, creating a more interesting shot... a picture you don't see every day.

3. If it is foggy at dawn, shoot against the light so that the fog is illuminated by the rays of the sun.

4. Silhouettes are best obtained before dawn, with a cloudless sky.

This is simple idea how to create something interesting in an uninteresting moment. All you need is an interesting shape.

5. Dark areas direct the eye towards light areas.

6. Long exposures will help to tell more about the weather: wind, temperature, movement of clouds.

7. If there are dark clouds in the sky, this does not mean that you need to stay at home.

Light in the gaps between the clouds, through the clouds - a beautiful moment worth capturing.

8. A bright spot of color in a sad gray landscape can make a strong impression on the viewer.

9. Pay attention to the background when you want to highlight the subject, especially when shooting in the forest.

10. Foggy days in winter can be boring.

But find a lone tree and place it in the center to emphasize the subject. Negative space will convey a sense of great emptiness and how small O tree on its background.

11. Reflections are always beautiful.

Earth is not always, and reflections can help get rid of unwanted elements.

12. Move the camera while pressing the shutter.

This works best when the subject is clearly separated from the background.

13. Contrast can be very helpful in separating the subject from the background.

A small white flower on green leaves, slightly highlighted with light, can create a simple yet beautiful photo.

14. Panoramas are a great way to convey the scale of a landscape in a forest.

15. Cloudy skies at sunset may offer nothing...

... or to give an almost miracle, when the sun's rays break through the clouds for just a second.

16. Sometimes the sky can become a mirror of the landscape - when the clouds follow the lines of objects on the ground.

17. A foggy morning is a wonderful time, especially if at some point the sun breaks through the fog.

Choose your shooting position so that your subject is in the mist, between you and the sun.

18. A light at the end of a forest path, when everything else is dark, can make for a great shot.

19. The best time to shoot waterfalls is early spring when snow melts in the mountains.

20. Photograph trees that look unusual... especially old trees.

21. The mountains in the background, behind the houses, can convey the magnitude of the landscape - use a telephoto lens for shooting.

22. When shooting in urban areas, look for complex dynamic lines. In addition, several vertical plans will add volume to the image.

23. Separate the illuminated area from the surroundings with a telephoto lens - and get a great photo.

24. When shooting, think about other perspectives - this can give a unique look to a simple subject.

25. Don't forget to see the details.

Sometimes a large landscape can take your attention away from smaller elements. Textures are a great thing, they can almost look like abstract art.

A detailed analysis of all examples is in this video:

I hope you liked the tips and found them useful. Keep filming - the only way become a better photographer!

About the Author: Toma Bonciu is a Romanian-based photographer specializing in landscape and travel photography. His other works are on his website and pages in

Landscape It is an expanded picture of nature. It would seem that it could be easier than taking a picture of the view you like. However, a few useful rules for landscape construction will help you to create high-end photographs.


Rice. 2

The basis for constructing a spectacular landscape are the unbreakable rules of composition. This is where the law of thirds comes in handy. Mentally divide the frame with imaginary horizontal lines. Always position the horizon line so that it intersects the landscape at a height of one third of the total height of the frame. (Fig. 1.2)

There may be exceptions if, for example, you want to emphasize the symmetry of the composition as in Fig. 3 (sea and sky).


Fig.3

In the landscape, the "protagonist" is of great importance. It can be a tree, an interesting building or group of buildings, an unusually shaped cloud, a yacht, or something else. The main character should be placed at the intersection of 3 vertical and 3 horizontal lines according to the rule of thirds.


Rice. 4

Versatility is one of the main characteristics of a good photograph. It is difficult to achieve the effect of spatial depth in the frame, but this is aerobatics. This is where the knowledge of the principle of perspective comes in handy (Fig. 5).


Rice. 5

Use a wide-angle lens, it will help you create the effect of the third dimension. But at the same time, remember to fill the foreground. In landscape photography, the center of the composition is almost always the horizon line. Unfilled areas of the foreground turn into compositional "holes". A flower, a tree branch, a gate, and similar seemingly insignificant elements of the composition can compensate for the emptiness of the foreground.


Rice. 6


Rice. 7

Practice: the low point is often the best when shooting landscapes. A dull grassy lawn in the foreground can be brightened up with an unexpected flower. A pile of picturesque boulders will be a suitable impetus for the viewer’s gaze to move along a winding path deep into the frame to a picturesque hill (“the main character”), as in Fig. 6.7.

Remember that the person is not looking at your image with a fixed gaze. The gaze moves along obvious or invisible lines that connect the individual elements of the composition. If these lines are diagonals, your landscape will gain dynamism and become much more interesting. The natural appearance of diagonals in the frame can be achieved by a good choice of shooting point. In this case, the left diagonal is always more expressive than the right one. A single diagonal is most effective when it is at a 45-degree angle to the horizon (or the bottom edge of the frame).


Rice. eight

Converging diagonal lines, as you know, are the basis of the principle of perspective (Fig. 9).


Rice. nine

Practice: When two objects of equal size appear in the frame, choose a shooting point from which one of them will appear smaller than the other. This will create the illusion of versatility in the image.


Rice. ten

An unusual angle for a landscape is just as possible as for any other genre of photography. Top view will save you from being caught in the frame of the sky or the horizon line. But you probably will not have problems choosing the right shutter speed for too bright sun (Fig. 11).


Fig.11

The advantage of a low vantage point is that the size of the subject in the foreground optically increases in the frame. This is especially important when you want to make a still life with a landscape in the background. Use a wide-angle lens, which will create a deep perspective in the frame, but even distant objects will remain in focus.

Photography is light. When shooting panoramic landscapes, the photographer always has to wait for a natural spotlight to appear in the gaps between the clouds, which will brightly illuminate the desired area in the frame. The most important thing here is to be patient, although the ability to catch the slightest changes in the weather also does not hurt. It is hardly worth shooting a landscape in rainy or cloudy weather. But as soon as it begins to clear up, the sun shines through the clearings between the clouds. Try to catch a ray of sunlight sufficient to illuminate the landscape.


Rice. 12

It is under such conditions that the contrast between the bright sun and gloomy clouds can be especially expressive. An important factor in successful outdoor shooting can be even the past rain, which cleared the air of dusty suspension, dispersed atmospheric haze and significantly improved visibility.


Rice. thirteen

Understanding the nature of light and its ability to turn even the most boring view into a stunning canvas is a fundamental skill for a serious photographer. The most spectacular landscapes are obtained at dawn and at sunset.


Rice. fourteen

The sun gives side light, high contrast and deep shadows make the space more expressive.
If you're shooting on a clear sunny day, beautiful white clouds can bring nature to life, as shown in fig. 15-16


Rice. fifteen


Rice. sixteen

If you decide to become a landscape photographer, get ready to travel. Your true friend will be a tripod. And the heavier it is, the more successful the pictures will be.

Landscapes are different: mountainous and flat, rural and urban, sea or forest. Landscapes can be shot at any time of the year, at any time of the day and in almost any weather.

The most beautiful are landscapes in which there is water. Whether it's a fast mountain stream, a waterfall or the vast expanse of the ocean - such landscapes always attract the viewer's attention with their beauty (Fig. 17-18).

Practice: Use a tripod and shoot at a slow shutter speed to capture the movement of the water (Fig. 19).

We continue to acquaint our readers with the best contemporary photographers. Today we will talk about the genre of landscape. So, read our review, share it with your friends and get inspired by admiring the works of landscape masters!

Dmitry Arkhipov

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A native Muscovite Dmitry Arkhipov has been fond of photography since childhood. A physicist by education, Dmitry served in the army, worked at the Institute for Space Research under the Buran program, created his own well-known IT company, while continuing to improve in the field of landscape photography.

The results of his travels to 108 countries of the world were five solo exhibitions, where Dmitry's works were seen by more than a million people. Now Dmitry Arkhipov is a titled photographer, a member of the Union of Photographers of Russia, winner and laureate of national and international photo contests.

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Denis Budkov is a native of Kamchatka, since 1995 he has been traveling and photographing his native land. Love for nature and the desire to show all its beauty became an incentive to learn the basics of photography and improve skills in practice. Denis's main passion is volcanoes, which are so rich in the nature of Kamchatka. The volcanic eruptions and peaceful Kamchatka landscapes captured by him have already received awards from the prestigious photo contests Best of Russia 2009, 2013, Wildlife of Russia 2011, 2013, Golden Turtle, Wildlife Photographer of the Year - 2011. Denis says that photography for him is a way of life, which is completely satisfactory. The main thing is to wait for the right moment to make the same frame.

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Mikhail Vershinin became interested in photography as a child; he had to give up visiting the photo studio in favor of another hobby - rock climbing and mountaineering, but even on sports routes he took a camera with him. Craving for travel in wild places and passion for filming eventually led Mikhail Vershinin to landscape photography. He explains his choice of this particular genre not only by a craving for nature, but also by a special mood, the ability to convey feelings and emotions with the help of a captured moment. The works of Mikhail Vershinin have repeatedly become finalists and winners of Russian and international competitions, including "National Geographic Russia - 2004" and FIAP Trierenberg Super Circuit - 2011 in the "Night Image" nomination.

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Oleg Gaponyuk, a MIPT graduate, lives and works in Moscow and has an unusual hobby - panoramic photography. For the sake of a good picture, he can easily go to the other side of the earth, while skiing, windsurfing and diving along the way. Despite the fact that his sports hobbies are associated with mountains, seas and oceans, in the field of photography Oleg became interested in creating spherical panoramas in the air. He is actively involved in the AirPano.ru project, within which more than 1,500 bird's-eye panoramas have already been made in the most interesting cities and corners of the world. In terms of the geography of shooting, the number of aerial panoramas and the artistic value of the material, this project is one of the world leaders in this type of panoramic photography.

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MIPT graduate Daniil Korzhonov prefers to call himself an amateur photographer, because he simply does what he likes. Photography allowed him to combine his passion for painting and love of travel. As a landscape photographer, he visits the most beautiful places in the world and “paints” what he sees on film. Combining photography with travel allows Daniil to lead active image life and express your thoughts and feelings through beautiful and original shots, taken both in wild corners and on the streets of cities. He advises all novice photographers to shoot as much and as often as possible in order to better understand the surrounding beauty of the world.

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Vladimir Medvedev - founder of the Club of Photographers wildlife, tireless traveler, professional photographer, winner of international competitions, including the 2012 BBC Wildlife Photography Competition for the Eric Hosking Portfolio Award. Cooperation with wildlife reserves around the world allows Vladimir to take unique shots of the virgin world and its inhabitants. According to Vladimir Medvedev, photography is both an art, a means of understanding the world, and a means of influencing the world. Starting photography is easy - you just need to buy a camera and learn from the best.

Yuri Pustovoi

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Yuriy Pustovoy is a graduate of VGIK, a cinematographer at the Odessa film studio with ten years of experience and a distinguished travel photographer. His work was recognized by the jury and visitors international exhibitions and photo contests, in the treasury of Yuri's awards is the Gold Medal of the International Federation of Photography FIAP Global Arctic Awards 2012. Yuri Pustovoy is not only a traveler and photographer, but also an organizer of photo tours for real amateur photographers and beginners. Landscapes from various parts of the world fall into the scopes of cameras of Yuri and his team. During the tour, Yuri shares his photographic experience, helps during filming with advice and deed, teaches how to process photographs in graphic editors.

Sergey Semenov

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Sergei Semyonov became interested in photography in 2003, when for the first time in his life he fell into his hands digital camera. Since then, he not only devoted all his free time to this hobby, but also turned photography into a profession, exchanging a career as an economist for the fate of a travel photographer. In pursuit of the most beautiful views of the earth, Sergey visits National parks North America, the mountains of Patagonia, the icy lagoons of Iceland, the Brazilian jungle and hot deserts. He shoots his favorite landscapes from a bird's eye view and is an active participant in the AirPano.ru project. In his first panorama, Sergei showed the Kremlin as birds see it.

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The Belarusian photographer is known as a master of the landscape genre. Like many of his colleagues, he believes that beauty is everywhere, and the photographer's skill lies in showing it to the viewer. He is characterized by exactingness to himself and the quality of his work. You will be surprised, but sometimes Vlad comes to the same place several times to achieve the right lighting and shoot a great shot. And yet, Vlad has been reading our magazine for a long time and regularly shares his photos with our entire audience.

Alexey Suloev

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Aleksey Suloev got his first camera at the age of seven and quickly got used to taking pictures of everything around him, especially since his passion for tourism allowed him to find himself in the most unusual, undeveloped places in the Caucasus, the Pamirs and the Tien Shan. Gradually, tourist trips turned into real photo trips. In pursuit of unusual shots, Alexey has already visited more than a hundred countries, the geography of his trips includes the most inaccessible and untouched places on our planet from the North to the South Pole. Alexey shoots because he cannot describe in words the beauty and diversity of the earth. He generously shares everything he sees with his audience so that everyone can find creative inspiration in the inexhaustibility of nature.

Greetings, dear readers! In touch with you, Timur Mustaev. Some amateur photographers consider landscape to be one of the most elemental genres of photography. To some extent, I share their point of view: go where you like, but shoot everything that comes into your head.

Plus, unlike studio shooting, which requires considerable financial costs, nature will not disappear and will not require anything in return, except for caring for it, and the situation changes depending on the time of year, giving scope for imagination.

But is the landscape really that simple? Let's figure it out together.

And let's start the debriefing, perhaps, with the definition of this genre and its place in human reality.

landscape in photography

Landscape- This is a genre in which the center of the image is nature.

This direction originated in the era of the absence of cameras, when well-known and not so famous artists went to the open air and conveyed what they had taken away with the help of brushes and paints.

That is why understanding the meaning of this genre should be learned from realist artists.

Pictures, like nothing else, allow you to feel the beauty of nature, they are inextricably linked with the inner world of a person, with his feelings, mood and love of life in general.

And in photography, a landscape is not a thoroughly accurate redrawing of this or that corner of nature, but its own worldview.

Modern landscape photography is quite versatile. Exhibitions of such materials instill in the viewer an artistic taste and develop the imagination by drawing associative parallels between real life and photographs.

The relationship between photography and life has given rise to a new direction - the urban landscape, in which the dominant is not nature, but the brainchild of society - the city with its numerous streets, architectural objects, squares, as well as an endless stream of cars and pedestrians.

The urban and classic landscape captivates even the most stingy photographers! And there is an explanation for this: shooting in this genre, you can get excellent shots without using expensive equipment.

All you need is desire, patience, a tripod, a SLR camera, and some skill in using it.

Shooting in this genre, as, in fact, in any other, is, first of all, a creative process, accompanied by your own vision of what is happening, but, oddly enough, there are many rules, the observance of which will save you from failures.

Landscape photography

Close your eyes for a moment and imagine: there are vast expanses of unprecedented beauty in front of you and it seems that as soon as you press the shutter button, the most beautiful image that the world has never seen will appear on the camera display ...

Capture this episode in your memory and open your eyes, your fantasy will remain a fantasy, and you will never know how to photograph a landscape if you neglect the rules listed below.

  • Maximum Sharpness. Many photographers practice shooting landscapes wide open, but "many" is not a good indicator of good work.

Classic technique during landscape photography focusing on the entire image is considered (shooting with a covered aperture).

Usually it is enough to make simple camera settings to get a sharp and moderately exposed photo: a slider in the f / 11-16 region, or you can trust the machine if you shoot in . However, to avoid shaking, it is best to shoot landscapes with or .

  • Presence of meaning. For any photo, it is important to have a semantic center of the composition, so that, as they say, the eye has something to catch on. Anything can serve as the center of attention: an interestingly shaped building, a tree, a mountain, a ship in the middle of the sea, etc.
  • Rule of thirds in the overall composition of the frame. The location of the semantic center in relation to all the elements and details of the image is as important as the presence of sharpness.

The reference says: the photo looks most advantageous when the objects being photographed are conventionally separated by lines that divide the image into three parts, both along and across.

  • Thoughtful foreground. Place the semantic centers on the front of the photo, leaving the “air space” in front, so you can create an effect of lightness and convey depth.
  • dominant element. The secret of successful nature photography is revealed - either the sky or the foreground should dominate in the picture.

If your photos do not fit this description, they will most likely be considered boring and mundane.

If it so happens that the sky during the photo shoot is uninteresting and monotonous - shift the horizon line to the upper third, so you will not let it prevail over the rest.

But if it seems that the airspace is about to explode or collapse to the ground with lava flows - give it 2/3 of the frame and you will see how much the plot of what is happening can change.

  • lines. There are endless ways to reflect the beauty of nature in full. One of them is the technique of including active lines in the composition. With the help of lines, you can redirect the viewer's gaze from one semantic point of the photo to another, while creating a kind of closed space.

Lines not only create patterns in the photo, but also add volume. This also applies to the horizon line, beyond which you constantly need an eye and an eye.

  • Motion. Many consider landscape shots to be calm and passive. But this is not necessarily the case! You can add life to a photo with the help of water or wind, for example, capture with a SLR camera a riot of the ocean or a flowing waterfall, a breath of wind or falling leaves from a tree, birds taking off or people walking.

The influence of weather and time on the quality of landscape photography

The golden rule of the landscape: "The scene and the plot can change dramatically overnight, depending on weather conditions and seasons"

It is a mistake to think that the best time for nature shots is a sunny day.

In cloudy weather, in terms of lighting effects, shooting is a pleasure: hail, rain with snow and thunderstorms can fill any landscape with an ominous, mysterious mood.

However, there is a side effect - the likelihood of getting your feet wet, getting sick and saying goodbye to the DSLR forever, since moisture can have a devastating effect on all electronics.

To avoid this, plan your day in advance, take your packing seriously: think about what to wear and what to wrap your camera in. For these purposes, it is best to purchase a waterproof case, or at least one that protects the lens from drops on the lens.

Shooting in the rain is not necessary - it's just one way to achieve artistic images.

This creates a very soft diffused light, giving the pictures a lightness and a special sleepy look.

A forest covered in fog will look much more mysterious and attractive than on a sunny day.

Although if the shooting takes place in the summer or autumn, the light penetrating through the foliage can create an interesting, wide aperture.

At sunset, using , you can take pictures of no less interesting landscapes, especially if the foreground is slightly backlit.

To avoid bunnies, use a hood or. This filter in landscape photography is simply irreplaceable.

Night shooting is technically the most difficult. Shooting nature in its full nature is pointless due to the lack of light. Therefore, you need to go where there are artificial light sources - the city.

In this case, you should not use the flash without interruption, raise the value to 800-1600 and go towards the city landscape!

A brief educational program on landscape photography has reached its point of no return! I hope this article was at least somewhat instructive and useful. I think that I have conveyed to you the meaning of how to photograph a landscape correctly in order to achieve the desired results.

If you are an aspiring photographer who wants to achieve positive success in photography, then everything is in your hands. To begin with, it is best to start with the concept of your SLR camera. And one of the video courses below can become an assistant. Most novice photographers, after studying this course, have a different attitude to SLR camera. The course will help to reveal all the important functions and settings of the DSLR, which is very important at the initial stage.

My first MIRROR- for owners of a CANON DSLR.

Digital SLR for beginners 2.0- for owners of a NIKON DSLR.

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All the best to you, Timur Mustaev.

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