Lesson 3 – Adding depth

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How to further enhance composition in your images and bring more oomph to your photos? 

For the last two days we were thinking about what our images were about and introducing simple compoisitional elements like lines and frames to strengthen the composition. Today, we're adding in one more thing to help you make your images better - DEPTH. 

How the eye perceives the world

Consider for a moment how we perceive the world in front of us. It's very rare that you would stand immobile and only look in one direction. Usually, you would look around, pay attention to the detail and wider scene. Focus your eyes on elements closer and further away. Maybe even move around. All the while your brain analyses what it sees and creates a multi dimensional image of what you are seeing in your brain. But with a photo, all you often have to go by is a flat rectangle with limited clues as to size, depth and general space. It's a lot harder to convey the idea of depth in this way.

There is a better way - increasing depth perception

This is a technique where you compose your photograph in such a way that we are able to see and separate objects at different distances from the photographer. Typically, but not always, you would be aiming for your subject to be sharp, but the other element to have a degree of blur. 

But how do we do it?

The missing space

Consider this image from the point of view of the three depth areas - Foreground ( in front of the subject) , Middle ground ( where the subject is) and Background ( what's behind the subject). 

Very often, the first of the three, foreground, consists of nothing more than thin air, which photographically speaking, is not very exciting. And even if there is something there, the photographer tends to try to avoid bringing it into the frame.

But imagine placing something else in that space and shooting 'through' it so that a part of that object is visible, and possibly blurred out a little. That little bit at the front, helps our brain makes sense of the space it sees and enriches the texture of the image. We instantly go a few notches up in terms of added interest. 

Straighten your angles

OK, now that we get the general premise, let's refine it. What I want you to do is to consider the angle with which you are shooting. Typically for most of adults, it will be a mildly diagonal, slightly downward pointing angle. It's not great, because if you consider what you end up seeing - your subject and then a lot of ground. As far as trying to create depth this does not work, because your depth only goes as far as the ground, there is no space visible in the frame beyond that. Instead, lower yourself down to the level of your subject and shoot at an angle that's parallel to the ground.

Use foreground to frame your subject

The concept of frames within frames is a known one in Photography - it is all about finding something within the image which would create a visual 'frame' around your subject. Well, if you are placing something between you and the subject, you may as well look if that element might be able to frame your subject, therefore doubling your composition lift - not only are you adding depth and texture, but also , highlight the subject by creating a frame for them.


Controlling the blur:

This is where this thing can get a bit technical. If you want to endure that your subject is sharp but what's in front of them and what's behind them isn't, you need to create what we call 'shallow depth of field'  - there are a few ways of achieving that : 

  • if you are using a camera and have an idea on how to change your camera settings, you should aim to set your aperture to wide ( smallest available number) 
  • if you use your camera but mostly use it on auto, set you camera to something like a Portrait mode instead and it will prioritise wide aperture settings
  • whether you do something with the aperture or not, zooming in ( using a longer focal length) will increase the visual compression of space and show more definition between the background / middle ground / foreground
  • keep in mind that of your subject is far away, you may be able to get great blur in the foreground but background may remain sharp. 


We teach how to control the depth if field etc fully in our regular courses - if you have a camera and are not using it much or don't know how to work it to its full potential, you should really consider joining us!

Day 3 Challenge

Simple - give us an image that has a noticeable foreground, middle ground and background!


More advanced - if you've mastered creating depth with blur, how about trying to keep both the foreground, middle ground and background reasonably sharp? It can be a great storytelling challenge! 


So it your course just a collection of tutorials?

In the era of the internet, you could find a tutorial for nearly everything out there. For free. Why would you even consider paying for a course?

To put it simply, because that's not how learning a skill works.

You can watch a tutorial on how to set the shutter speed on your camera, but that won't necessarily mean you now can take a beautiful photo of something in motion. You only learned a fragment of a skill. You didn't consider all the other elements that make a difference. It's not how we teach. 

To give you an example - we have a module dedicated to capturing movement. We teach about shutter speed of course. But you also learn : how to make your focus follow your subject on the move, how to compose your photo to best illustrate the speed, whether to make your subject tack sharp or introduce a degree of blur to highlight the speed and how to apply it in common child-centred scenarios - swings, running etc . And then you go and try all this out and we give you feedback and advice on how to make things better, what you may have missed and to praise your efforts.

You don't get that from a random tutorial. YOU LEARN SO MUCH MORE

BUT WILL I IMPROVE???

Ah, the question nobody asks out loud but everybody is consciously wondering. You may be wondering if something like our course is the right thing for you. Will you be able to follow? Will you be able to transform your photography? Will you still benefit if you've already had some prior photo knowledge? 

The answer is an emphatic yes. We say that because we see it with every single new group that starts. When you learn how to use that awesome tool of yours, the camera, when you learn how to see the world like it does, when you learn what things help in creating a strong image and when you learn our tricks for capturing children naturally, as they are, who they are, you can't not improve. 

Did you know that the vast majority of photos featured in this bootcamp was taken by our students? 

And since the proof is in the pudding, just see for yourself - here are some before and afters by our students, Mums and Dads just like you.