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Photography Q&A
Big is beautiful - how to?
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<blockquote data-quote="wud" data-source="post: 231889" data-attributes="member: 13578"><p>Another thing I've been wondering about - when doing a full body image (small, big, man, woman, whatever), especially in the studio, I think its a little hard to figure out which hight to place my camera in??</p><p></p><p>If I get to high with it, I think it easily makes the body looks like the legs are to small, the upper body to big. </p><p>If getting to low, then the opposite. </p><p>I know to get in eye-hight with whatever you are shooting, I just dont think it works when doing a person who stands up. </p><p></p><p>In studio, I think its just a tiny move, which causes this. I of course concentrate and try to find the right spot, but I go by instinct and still haven't really figured out, which position works (for the camera).</p><p></p><p>Does anyone know what I am talking about, and do someone have some info about this? </p><p></p><p></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wud, post: 231889, member: 13578"] Another thing I've been wondering about - when doing a full body image (small, big, man, woman, whatever), especially in the studio, I think its a little hard to figure out which hight to place my camera in?? If I get to high with it, I think it easily makes the body looks like the legs are to small, the upper body to big. If getting to low, then the opposite. I know to get in eye-hight with whatever you are shooting, I just dont think it works when doing a person who stands up. In studio, I think its just a tiny move, which causes this. I of course concentrate and try to find the right spot, but I go by instinct and still haven't really figured out, which position works (for the camera). Does anyone know what I am talking about, and do someone have some info about this? [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Big is beautiful - how to?
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