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Assignment, Week 11: Perspective in Portraits

Theme of the week: "Eyes" and/or "Close-up"

Angle of view and vantage point are two of the most important aspects of a photograph. In fact, one could say these two things define every photograph in existence - what you're seeing and where you're seeing it from.

Angle of view is an attribute that defines how much of a given scene that you see. A wider angle of view means you see more, and a narrower angle of view means you see less. Here's an example of a scene, and how the angle of view defines how much of the scene you see:

Here is the wide-angle image (the view denoted by the red lines), and the narrow-angle image (view denoted by blue lines)

As we can see here, a narrow angle of view causes us to see less of the scene - here we see only the performer, where in the wide angle photo we could see the performer and the entire stage surrounding her. Another result is that the part of the scene we *do* see in the narrow angle photo - the performer - is magnified much larger. You're probably more familiar with the term "zoom" or perhaps "focal length". This is essentially what "zooming in" or using a "longer focal length" is doing - narrowing the angle of view, seeing less of the scene, and as a result magnifying the scene that you do see, and vice versa for having a wider angle by zooming out or using a shorter focal length.

The angle of view you choose is going to force you to do certain things with regards to framing. Say you're taking a photo of a person. If you used a wide angle of view ("zoomed out", "short focal length"), you could stand right next to them and take their picture. If you were using a narrow angle of view ("zoomed in", "long focal length"), you would have to stand much farther away. This introduces another variable into the equation: subject distance, which is going to affect perspective.

Here's a real-world example. The first image is using a wide angle of view, very close to the subject (Kate). The second is using a medium angle of view, at a medium distance from the subject. The last is a narrow angle of view, at a long distance from the subject. Note that the size of the subject is staying constant throughout the photos: I'm "zooming in" but stepping farther back at the same time.

There are a few important differences to note.

This week's assignment is all about experimenting with different perspectives and vantage points. When most people use their cameras, they just leave it "zoomed out", and get as close as they need to when taking a picture. However, the "zoom" feature on your camera can do a lot more than just zoom in when things are far away - using your camera zoomed in at a narrow angle of view can force you into different subject distances and perspectives than you normally would.

You have two options for this week's assignment. Option A is to do a portrait session - find a friend or family member, and experiment with portraits using different angles and subject distances to get different perspectives. Another thing you might want to try is to use different vantage points - get lower or higher, or shoot from the side, etc. The goal here is to get as very diverse array of photos, with different perspectives and angles, all of the same subject. Option B is to spend an entire day taking photos zoomed in to your camera's maximum zoom (the narrowest angle of view). Most of the time people take pictures at the widest angle of view - the purpose of this excercise is to explore photographs taken at the narrow angle of view, and what kind of changes in perspectives, or vantage points, you get when shooting exclusively at this end of the zoom range on your camera.

Assignment Summary:

Resources: