What is the BEST souvenir you could bring home for yourself
from your travels?
Toastmasters and most welcome guests, if you are like me and
have a terrible memory, then photographs are the most valuable souvenirs from
your travels. I have travelled over the world and depending on who I
travel with, the pictures I have as mementos might not be the only memories I
want to keep from a particular destination. Some are really bad. Now, with
digital cameras, you are at least able to check on the spot if the picture will
make it to my Facebook and if not, to take another one right away. It does not
however, take away the fact that if you follow 3 simple rules, you will not be
spending the whole afternoon trying to get the perfect shot with the Eiffel tower.
What do you think the photographer was trying to capture in this picture? The lamp or the sofa? …These days, digital cameras allow you to have a grid on the screen to make it easier to center the main subject of your picture and to align the ground horizontally. It always amazes me that as easy as technology has made it, quite a few people still cannot take a decent picture. Like this one:
Apparently it is okay to cut my head off when taking a picture in the south of France. After all, I just need a memento of how blue the sky was and a sample of that wall there. Or maybe I want to remember that in Geneva [slide], the ground might not have been quite level.
This guy knows what he’s doing. With the newest cameras, if the setting is on ‘automatic’, they would sometimes detect that you are taking a picture against a brighter background and the flash will be triggered automatically. If you do not know better however, you would end up with pictures like this.
This is what happens when you put the flash on.
Let’s not talk about the angle there, just make sure you know where the brightest source of light is.
Framing and lighting may be subject to taste. The
photographer may always use as an excuse that he or she, wanted to create an
artistic photo, an out of the ordinary perspective on the subject in the
picture. However, nobody could excuse a picture like this one.
The third rule is, unless you are trying to take a candid photograph, wait for the subjects to be ready. It is good to count out loud ‘1, 2, 3’ so that the people being photographed are fully aware of when it is going to happen. Now, my memento from Le Casino de Monte Carlo is a picture where I am half sitting or half standing. And my souvenir picture in Bangkok’s Grand Palace is this one, where I was still trying to figure out what the guide was saying.
The third rule is, unless you are trying to take a candid photograph, wait for the subjects to be ready. It is good to count out loud ‘1, 2, 3’ so that the people being photographed are fully aware of when it is going to happen. Now, my memento from Le Casino de Monte Carlo is a picture where I am half sitting or half standing. And my souvenir picture in Bangkok’s Grand Palace is this one, where I was still trying to figure out what the guide was saying.
Capturing digital mementos is easier than it has ever been
before. According to 1000memories, a website that allows users to archive and
share old photos, “Every 2 minutes today we snap as many photos as the whole of
humanity took in the 1800s.” Quantity does not trump quality however so just
remember the 3 rules: center the picture on what you want your focal point to
be, think about lighting and allow the subjects to settle in before you click.
Those will make for better mementos and will not make you ashamed of sharing
your vacation pictures. There is nothing worse than going through hundreds of
pictures to find 10 good ones to share on Facebook.
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