By Amy Renfrey


There is very much to find out in taking pictures. Not only do we require to master our digital camera but we must appreciate how lighting manifests as a photo. We need to realize how light works in photography for the reason that we can exercise this education to photograph beautiful images. Stunning images refers to clarity, depth, colour and tone.

A great way to turn out to be expert in photography is to start photographing various surfaces of different things. Different textures may include wood, steel, leaves and brick. These subjects can really draw attention to depth and an interesting light very rapidly and without difficulty. We can learn a lot from shooting these textures. Once we get the right light to emphasize these textures our images unexpectedly have intensity and come to life. You can prove these textures a variety of ways. I suggest photographing these fascinating textures with well-balanced light spread evenly right through your photograph. If you are unable to get well-balanced light then shadows may work to an advantage.

A very good photograph that has motivating textures are dead foliage drapped over a wooden surface. You can stay until the sunlight has reduced in the sky to get some shadow areas beneath the plants. You may discover that your shadow becomes part your placement of subjects within the photo. What this will mean is that shadows can work to make the photo look good.

A rustic appearance and feel is a good place to start. Taking photos of aged wood fence posts with rusty nails and wires can really bring wood as a texture to life. You see what we want is make the wood and the nails look so they look authentic. In other words make it look powerful by improving the depth of the photo. We would like the viewer to feel like they can lean in and touch the texture.

In order to create this realism in your picture making you need to construct a little list of surfaces to shoot. The fence and rusty nails are a terrific starting point. You may also like to take photos of contrast in textures such as metal and wood. A metallic band wrapped over a wood fence can make for a terrific picture. Contrast in textures such as this can be done in an antique tone and black-and-white for extra effect. They can also be shot in a selection of other lights, colours and looks that you can formulate yourself in Photoshop or Lightroom.

What is a tone? A tone relates to light and colour. Saturdated colour, deep tones mean that your shot may have a lot of black and grey tone, shadowy yellow and deep orange to it. Light tones may mean that your photograph has lots of colors of pale colours. In rustic photography, where we want to shoot wonderful different textures, we often find that dark tones are a factor.

Deep tones can accentuate the shadow. In order for your photographs to look like they have real live texture then we need to draw attention to the intensity and light range contained within your shot. You may decide on a deep or dark tone to give that nail more rust or that metallic band around the wood more brightness.

When we use more contrast in our rural photography we get a superior looking texture. This is since the contrast in the light brings up the detail of the surface of the textured subject. The lighting works to bring out the detail in the lighter parts and deepen the shadow in the dark areas.

A means to creating successful textured surfaces is to keep your composition uncomplicated. Genuine textures, such as foliage and wood, work most ideal when there is nothing to clutter the shot. Simply capture the main subject and make sure there are no distracting things in the backdrop or the forefront. Once you've done this you can work to raise the contrast, perfect the light and deepen the tones. There is nothing worse than a messy shot.

Old abandoned vehicles are an example of how you can create wonderful different textures in your photography. When my spouse and I were traveling to a country town we came across an old abandoned car. This vehicle was from either the 1940s or the Fifties. It appeared like it had been forgotten about for for years and years. As soon as I saw this car I started to be very enthusiastic. The second I saw it I knew I wanted a rustic looking photo.

I knew that the steel, corrosion and discolored paint would look absolutely brilliant in monochrome. Once I took a string of images of the old vehicle I then opened the photo in Lightroom. I increased the white and highlights, amplified the blacks, and experimented with the tone curve. What does this signify? It simply means that I changed the tone of the shot to bring out the interesting points of the car. I wanted to increase the illuiminent steel against a understated, natural backdrop. Once you transform the light all of a sudden your different textures become stronger and so much more interesting.

Depending on how you want your different textures to look, you can use bright or filtered light. Filtered lighting is naturally better to use as it offers us more options in the long term. Strong light can create highlights and shadows that emphasize contrast. This can actually work to your advantage.

Soft light can work very well for surfaces of different things because it highlights the detail. it can give your texture a more three dimensional look. If you are taking photos of an old fence post then the absence of intense brightness will bring out the finer details of the timber. You will get to see the patterns, lines and shapes of your surface a lot more in subdued light. In tough bright light you may lose these fine points completely.

If you want to create stunning textures and not worry about the tiny finer details, then a country scene with high contrast may work beautifully. A fence line surrounded by dense grass can be a superb textured photograph to begin with. Once you angle the camera so that the fence post line is running into the distance you not only have beautiful textures but you have great composition.

There are a lot more things you can do to emphasize your textures. There is a mobile phone app identified as Instagram. It has just joined forces with Lightroom. This is a marvellous thing! Instagram is an app that produces antique, sepia, black-and-white and the whole other selection of tones for your photos.

Instagram gives you the variety of antique tones. In other words if you use an antique tone over your photo it looks like it was photographed in 1977. Once Instagram meets Lightroom, you have the option of producing a unique look and feel over your photos with rustic and interesting textures.

Instagram also supplies you the selection of unique borders. You can have a stark deep black border to accentuate the deep hues and tones in a photo of dried golden leaves. Or, you can have a supple white border to match the muted tones of a photo of a car park. Or you might have no border at all.

Remember that making different textures is simple. Once you have captured it then the joy begins. Make sure that you choose contrasting things like dead leaves or steel. Photograph them at the same time. Then try changing the contrast and lighting of the image once you open it up in your prefered editing software program.

I urge that you let imagination and curiosity be your guides. Open up your picture in your favourite editing program and try a number of various methods. Add to the differences between light and dark, reduce the yellow, reduce the blue, modify the white balance etc. These are just examples of techniques that I attempted when I was learning how to enhance my different textures in my photos. I got to a place where I understood what I preferred and created many different possibilities for myself.

These different selections I designed gave my images a look and feel that I loved. Some were seriously saturated in deep yellows and oranges. Some were light sepia, and some were a very sharp contrast in the black and white medium. These tones, applied over rural things, made my textures look amazing. Rusty fences took on a strong presence. Shiny metal bands wound securely over timber fence posts seemed appealing and from the past. Hanging metal chimes looked classic and ageless.

Just think about surface and daylight first. Then your editing comes afterward. Think about the light and how it interacts with your setting to emphasise physical surfaces. Think about how lighting behaves and makes things appear different at various times of the day. Photograph unique natural and man-made different textures together. This will let you to explore differences between light and dark contained within your textures. The examination of light will allow you to bring out the depth and the detail within the photograph. Then apply some simple photo editing. This will enable you to vary the tone. Fine tuning the colour and light gives you the opportunity to create some very inventive photographs.

This is an exercise in creative pursuit. This is not about winning first place in a photo competition or being better than anyone else. This is about how this makes you feel. You can impress people later on but first learn to interpret your light on how it plays upon the textures in your environment. Once you've done this you can capture extraordinary textured photos. Have fun and happy shooting!




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