Hello guys,This is Irfan again.Today i wanna share an important topic which is more important for a photographer❤ First of all we should know, what is bottleneck period of photography.In laymn's terms: It refers to the period when the junior photographers have stagnated after entering the photography gate for a period of time.
During this period, photographers seem to be "lost" in the creative direction of shooting, and it is difficult to break through their own existing photography pattern and reach new heights. It is often expressed as: the passion of photography rests, and the filming is mostly out of the box.
I'm familiar with the composition and use light, but I don't know how to use it. Watching and watching the film all understand, but "failure" when used in battle, and so on.
Take more shots, and get real knowledge from real shots The "multiple shots" here should not be simply understood as "a lot of" shots, but should be "quality" shots.
For photographers who are in the bottleneck period of photography, simple quantitative shooting is no longer what they need. What they need is more conscious and quality shooting.
It is necessary to always remind yourself to control the rhythm of pressing the shutter (consciously slow down) during the shooting creation. There is an old saying in photography: "Shooting from another angle" is to remind us of the multi-angle observation arrangement (composition) of the picture during the shooting process, and strive to shoot a more contagious film. 🥳🥳🥳
The good shooting awareness and habits formed by this conscious cultivation are a basic point for enhancing "photographic eyesight." "One more, two slow, three changes" is my interpretation and feeling of "multiple shots".💓💓
I think it’enough for today.Next time I'll come with Part-2. Stay with me.
If you feel good after reading my article then please support me.❤I also wish support from our beloved, sir @MarcDeMesel who alsways encourages all the writer and photographer❤.Thank You all, for your valuable contribution❤ .
when men hold their liberty by true obedience to rules of their own making."