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This week’s photo challenge from the team at WordPress is ‘The World Through Your Eyes – and so that’s what I am doing. The article suggests:
Observe a scene first before lifting your camera to your eye.
Ask yourself: What is the subject? What will you (not) include in the frame?
Look for natural lines or frames in the shot to guide the viewer’s eye.
Try different angles: Get low on the pavement. Look down from above.
I have chosen a photo that I took the photo for an event being organised via Facebook in which 1,500 people worldwide have joined in on today to take photographs of the sky.
(In fact, there may be fewer than 1,500 in total – because it is a Friday, and because some people will have been delayed or detained in one way or another.)
The thing is though that I knew I had to take a photo of the sky. And I knew that the best chance of getting a sky was looking out over Bruntsfield Links here in Edinburgh. And I knew that the pointy church was going to be in the shot.
And then I took the photo and it was ‘meh’ – that is, disappointingly flat and uninspiring.
So I converted it to black and white – and not only is in less flat, but the light patch in the sky seems to be just above the church spire.
So, did I think before I raised the camera to my eye? Not a lot. I composed it before I left home, but at the time I took the shot I was mostly thinking of getting back home.
Did I think about what would be in and what would be out of the shot? Yes
Did I think about lines and frames? Yes
Did I look for different angles? Kind of. I tipped the camera to include more sky and less ground.


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