A Parent’s Guide to Candid Photos

30 Day Photography Fundamentals 

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Tip 17 - Practice Less Is More

If I have to share one single most important tip on how to improve photography quickly, this is it.⠀7 years ago, I wrote a blog “Less Is More - 7 Approaches To Create Simple Yet Strong Composition”, it’s still by far the most valid tip I have for anyone who’s interested in improving photography

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Tip 18 - See The Lines

Pay attention to interesting lines. No matter seen from a piece of architecture, or a river path in the nature, straight or curvy, in the foreground or background, there are lines almost everywhere in our lives.

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Tip 19 - Find Something Interesting In An Ordinary Place

Did you find the relation between the above two photos? Are you the first photographer or the second? Many of you might have stopped taking photos or posting images during the pandemic - I get it. I felt the same frustration when we couldn’t travel. That doesn’t mean you can’t find the inspiration. In fact, beauty is everywhere!

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Tip 20 - Find Balance

A good composition is typically simple and balanced. This doesn’t mean your image has to be symmetrical. It’s the balance of your content, so you don’t feel one side of your image is too “heavy” and the other side is too “light”.

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Tip 21 - Blur The Foreground

Most of us know blurring the background helps achieve the dream result in portrait. However, I’m talking about blurring your foreground today. Your camera is very close to something between you and your subject so that the foreground is blurry. There are at least 3 good reasons.

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Tip 22 - Find Repeat Patterns

A big mistake many of us make is to include too many things in the background of a photo. They distract your audience’s attention from your main subject and story telling. An easy solution is to put your subject in front of a clean background.

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