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PHOTOGRAPHING BUILDINGS
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Getting Your Sharpest Shot:
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Sharp lenses and accurate films need
your help if they're to deliver optimum
results. Using a
tripod
will result in much sharper pictures
than almost any handheld camera can
produce. A tripod also helps you compose
the picture carefully--you can make the
fine adjustments to place the subject
just right. With a tripod you can take
indoor pictures without needing a flash.
If
you're photographing a building to get
an overall view, any outlines or
features that are too close to the edge
of your viewfinder may be cut off in the
final photo. Use a wider angle lens or
move back enough from the subject to
give it some "breathing room".
Sometimes it is easier to get a good
building photo by moving a long ways
away and using a short telephoto lens
(be sure to use a tripod for any
telephoto work). Compared to working
closer with a wide lens, the telephoto
will be less likely to distort the
appearance of vertical lines.
If
your subject is a building, it will look
best in a picture if the brightest light
is on the face or main entrance side.
Compare early morning and late afternoon
lighting. Strong mid-day shadows may
obscure a lot of the architectural
detail.
Direct
sunlight may also cause the details of
transportation machinery to be obscured.
It's a good idea to use
fill flash
for these subjects, or try to reflect
some light into shaded areas by holding
a piece of 30x40" white matt board or a
sheet of foamboard at an effective
angle. A hazy sun often provides the
best light for artifacts displayed
outdoors, and this softer light is also
recommended for photos of a building if
its entrance faces north or trees cast
"busy" shadows on it.
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Try a Better Point of View:
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In
photographs, the shape of buildings and
artifacts is easier to see if the camera
is aimed at a corner, rather than
flat-on. A corner view provides twice as
much information in one picture.
Convergence
occurs in many building photos when the
camera has been aimed upward, often from
street level. The lens makes the
vertical lines of the building tilt
inward, much more than you would see
just looking from that angle without a
camera.
 
To
achieve a less distorted effect in your
pictures, try to set up your camera
where it won't have to be tilted up too
much to include the whole structure. See
if you can aim from an upper level of a
neighboring building, from a balcony, a
stairway--any platform that brings your
lens height closer to the mid-point of
the subject will help.
Information and Illustrations provided
by "Heritage BC"

ADDITIONAL
READINGS: |
A
source you may want to try is the
electronic
PRESERVATION GROUP BOOKS CATALOGUE.
This catalogue includes a wide variety
of heritage/historic related
publications. Included are several books
on photographing historic buildings and
photogrammetry. If you are interested,
connect to their
WEBSITE.
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