Top 10 Tips For Better Photos
Published on October 28, 2007 - 28 Comments
With the advent of digital cameras, every man and his dog has become a photographer. The best thing about digital photography is the fact that you can take thousands of photos at no cost, so you can experiment with these tips. Remember, this is just a rough guideline - you can break all of these rules and still take amazing photos - but it is good to know the rules before you break them.
10. Direct Your Photos
Candid photos make for some of the best photos around, but if you are taking a family portrait, or any photograph with a group of people, spend some time directing your subjects to create a much more interesting photograph. Throw in some props or try taking the photo from various viewpoints and angles. Try to let your subjects personalities show in the photograph. Tight groups make the best photos.
9. Go Vertical
The majority of people when taking photographs will take them on a horizontal plane. However, some subjects really lend themselves to vertical photography - for example the Eiffel Tower. Portrait photos are often best done vertically (hence the fact that vertical photos are referred to as “Portrait”). Before taking your photos, turn the camera sideways and look at the same scene - you may find that the vertical perspective gives a much more interesting result. This rule works both ways - if you normally take vertical photos - try shooting some horizontal ones occasionally.
8. Use Flash Outside
When taking photos outdoors, using the fill flash setting can dramatically improve the quality of your prints. Use it in bright sunlight to lighten dark shadows under the eyes and nose of your subject - this is especially important when the sun is directly overhead or behind your subject. You can also use it on cloudy days to brighten up faces so they stand out from the background.
7. Use a Plain Background
A cluttered background can be very distracting in your photographs - so try to get photos with clear backgrounds or not too much activity. It is also a good idea (when you can’t get a clear background) to look around your scene in the viewfinder to make sure that you are not taking a photo of a person with a pole sticking out of their head! If so, change angles.
6. Lock the Focus
Most modern digital cameras allow you to lock your focus. This is normally done by pressing the shutter button half way when you have your focus as you want it. Keep pressing and reframe your shot - the focus will stay the same. Press the shutter button the rest of the way. This is a great way to focus on a less dominant aspect of a photograph, or an off-center object without losing your photographs balance.
5. Get Down on their Level
This is especially useful if you photograph animals, children, or anything lower than eye level. Get down on your knees and take the photo from the perspective of the subject - you get a much more personal and professional looking result. This is also a good tip for general photography - instead of photographing standing up, try looking at things from different heights and angles - you will see the world in a new light and get some great unique photos. That’s my cat Dexter incidentally.
4. Know your Flash
If you take a photograph beyond your maximum flash range, it will be too dark - get to know the range of your flash. For many cameras it is about four steps away - but check your manual and do some tests to be sure. Also be sure not to use the flash too close, as you will get overexposed photos.
3. Move in Close
By moving in close to an object, you reduce a lot of unnecessary background noise - allowing your viewers to really focus on the subject. This gives great impact. Try taking photographs where your subject fills the viewfinder - this is also a good way to get some of the best portrait photos - just ignore your subjects objections if they think you are too close (some people are not comfortable with very close up photographs of themselves).
2. Watch the Light
Light is the most important aspect of photography - before taking your photo you should really try to observe what the light is doing. You may need to change your position or some of the objects in the photograph in order to optimize the lighting. For people pictures choose soft light (cloudy) days - try to avoid overhead light, which causes harsh shadows. For scenic photographs, early morning and early evening are the best - these will give you photographs with long shadows and rich color.
1. Move from the Middle
This one tip alone will dramatically improve your photos - do not center your subject. Almost every photograph taken by an amateur has a centered subject. If you put your subject at the side of the photograph you will get a much better result. There are certain areas in a photograph frame that give a much greater balance and appearance to the photograph. Imagine your frame is lined with a tic-tac-toe grid - try to put your subject on one of the intersections of lines.
Bonus: Take a lot of photos
Digital photography costs very little - you have no processing costs and no film costs. The perfect photo is often one in a thousand - so take one thousand! You might not get your perfect shot, but the more photos you take the better your chances. Get some good software to help you go through your photographs quickly - I recommend Adobe Lightroom, or Apple iPhoto.
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1. katheryn - October 28th, 2007 at 11:09 am
number 3 should say “move” instead of “movie”
otherwise, good list. I love photography!
2. Cyn - October 28th, 2007 at 11:26 am
oops! fixed.
Dexter is teh cuteness!
3. Juggz - October 28th, 2007 at 11:47 am
Let’s Not forget: Get a good camera.
4. jfrater - October 28th, 2007 at 11:56 am
Katheryn: thanks for that - Cyn has sorted it out
I really need to read over things more carefully!
Cyn: thanks - he is!
Juggz: of course! Mine is a Canon EOS 30D - I love it.
5. David - October 28th, 2007 at 12:01 pm
Juggz: Specifically a SLR camera, digital or not, is lightyears beyond point-and-shoots
6. Ravyn - October 28th, 2007 at 12:28 pm
I have an Olympus FE-115. Nice little compact since I can’t afford the big bad cameras there are out there. I love taking pics. Oh and I thought it funny in #7 when you said “so you are not taking a picture of a person with a pole sticking out of their head.” That is historically hysterical.
7. Juggz - October 28th, 2007 at 12:37 pm
I wish I had a decent one. What I have works for small stuff, family and what not but i would love to get my hands on something better one day.
8. Twinkle - October 28th, 2007 at 4:47 pm
me too… I would really love a good camera… I’ll wait when I graduate.
Anyways, I love these tips because they’re easy to understand. Thanks!
9. Kelsi - October 28th, 2007 at 5:24 pm
I still haven’t gotten into digital photography, but good list! I’m slowly moving out of making my own black and white prints, which is SO fun, and I havent’ really had the money or time to look into a nice digital camera.
10. Borg - October 28th, 2007 at 7:23 pm
Awesome idea for a list. I’m saving up for a digital camera now. Even though my dad is a professional photographer, I really don’t know too much about taking photographs. I’m always excited to learn more and this list helps. Thanks!
11. jfrater - October 29th, 2007 at 1:05 am
I am glad that everyone liked this list because I really enjoyed writing it - photography is such a fun passtime - I just wish I had more time for it.
12. PT - October 29th, 2007 at 2:46 am
Most of the tips are so blindingly obvious and yet many have never occurred to me once. I particularly like the idea of using the flash during the day and as for knowing the range of your flash it always makes me smile when I see millions of flash lights going off in stadiums exactly what are they hoping to illuminate? Great work as usual J
13. dalandzadgad - October 29th, 2007 at 6:41 am
you’re going really fast, my router broke over the weekend and you already have 8 lists!
btw, your cat is awesome, as is the photographer
14. jfrater - October 29th, 2007 at 6:47 am
dalandzadgad: I ended up getting stuff done much faster this weekend than usual - not sure why
At least there is plenty for you to read now 
15. Penny - October 29th, 2007 at 8:10 pm
Great tips and the frog photo is fantastic! As for affordable digital cameras, I get decent results with my Fujifilm S5100. No, it’s not an SLR, but it only cost something like $300. It’s 4 megapixels with a 10x zoom and it’s a couple of years old. The newer ones are even more powerful. I LOVE my camera
16. jfrater - October 30th, 2007 at 1:18 am
Penny: you make a good point actually - if you really know your camera well, then you will also get better photos - as we see in your case!
17. Penny - October 30th, 2007 at 4:06 pm
Jamie: Thanks for the nice comment, but I really don’t know the camera as well as I should. My real “secret” is taking plenty of pics. Although I try to compose the final shot in the viewfinder, I sometimes crop in Paintshop Pro … it can be the difference between ho-hum and wow!
18. jfrater - October 31st, 2007 at 4:11 am
Penny: actually that is a really good tip - cropping in photoshop is sometimes the only thing you need to do to turn a mediocre photo in to a brilliant one - I do it all the time. It also means you don’t have to throw away all your photos just because of poor positioning. Thanks for mentioning it
19. Craig - December 2nd, 2007 at 5:31 pm
This is a great list. I work in a store here in Australia that sells a lot of digital cameras and we print our customers photos for them. I’m always trying to show my customers how to get better photos. Would you mind if I used this list in my store?
20. jfrater - December 3rd, 2007 at 1:12 am
Craig: definitely not - feel free
21. mattayeaux - December 10th, 2007 at 5:12 pm
Jamie your cat and my cat could be identical twins. She is a Bangel right? I missed this list somehow and linked from the digital camera list posted today. Thanks, these are some great tips.
22. jfrater - December 10th, 2007 at 11:44 pm
mattayeaux: I don’t think he is a Bengal - but he does have some of the signs - like a white belly and very placid nature. I got him in London.
23. suzi - December 16th, 2007 at 4:35 pm
good list.
I’m a professional photographer, and you did a good job sharing tips that the average person can appreciate.
Digital is great! Youu can experiment and learn to your heart’s content. And the dropping prices on memory is amazing. My first gig of memory cost me 200 dollars. No I can get 2 gigs for 29 bucks.
And yes– cute cat!
24. copperdragon - January 5th, 2008 at 5:01 pm
most digital cameras have a B&W setting - try taking a couple shots in black and white. its great for buildings.
second, super-glue your camera to a tripod. fuzzy photos are a photographers biggest problem.
third, i always keep a UV or polarizing filter on my camera, to reduce the glare.
25. Solar - January 16th, 2008 at 6:33 pm
On number 3, it says “Move in Close” and its purpose is to focus on subject and take away the distracting background … this is ok in some situations however if you are taking a picture of someone’s face it is better to zoom in than to get real close, not just for their sake, but because their nose will be grossly distorted, i.e., much bigger in proportion to their head. The should use the zoom function on the P&S or as with an SLR, use the zoom of say 85-120 mm range is the standard for portraits … ofc if you are just focusing on the face you can even use more of a telephoto on a pod …
26. cugirl - January 31st, 2008 at 9:32 pm
Your kitty is just too precious
27. eli - March 3rd, 2008 at 6:37 am
Aww, Dexter is adorable. Good picture. And thank you for the list on photography. I’ll take any advice to get ahead in my photography class.