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Landscape Photography Values to Be Aware Of

Author: Steven Manolakis
by Steven Manolakis
Posted: Jan 23, 2022

Landscape photographers can value notions such as technical perfection, originality, environmentalism, storey, aesthetics, and reality. Values can be described as broad preferences for the best path of action or outcome. As a result, values represent a person's sense of right and wrong, as well as what "should" be. This indicates that the photographer's values will influence his photographic decisions.

Putting a Feeling into Words

Many landscape photographers admire the ability to express emotions. Making a landscape shot that elicits a specific emotion in the viewer is an intriguing form of communication between the photographer and the viewer that might be more or less purposeful. From abstracts to very detailed and complicated landscapes, the images can be anything. There are no restrictions on how the best landscape photographers decide to portray a sentiment, but the photo may only appeal to a tiny group of individuals.

Perfection in terms of technique

Many Australian landscape photographers place a high priority on technical excellence or, at the very least, have a lower bar for what is acceptable in terms of focus, sharpness, unnecessary blur, and noise. We can all agree that a photo should have the elements it wishes to portray in focus, that the photo should not be blurry due to a handheld camera or the wind shaking it, and that the amount of noise in the photo should not distract the viewer.

That 'Special' Occasion

Capturing "that exceptional moment," which typically involves some unusual or rare weather conditions or special natural events, is another important aspect of landscape photography. It appears to take more effort to capture "that exceptional moment," despite the fact that many of those great moments aren't all that special. Anyone may photograph the aurora borealis, a sunset, or a bolt of lightning. You'll almost always need an extra aspect to make achieving the magical moment more difficult.

Realism

Some landscape photographers place a high value on what they show in their photos being "real," implying that there is a link between what they saw with their own eyes at the time they took the photo and the final print. It's actually quite difficult to define what "genuine" is. Was that what the camera captured, or modified it.

Originality

Originality is another value we observe in landscape photography. Originality can be achieved in a variety of ways, but in general, it entails developing something that no one else has done before. You don't have to go out of your way to find and shoot a fresh site that no one else has seen; you may capture it in a unique way.

The author of this article is one of the leading landscape photographers in Australia. In this article, he has mentioned a few landscape photography values to be aware of. Visit https://stevenstanleymanolakis.com/.

About the Author

The author is a Sydney based one of the best award-winning landscape photographers. Captured from a meta-level perspective, his work inspires reflection on the complexity of systems and individual disposition.

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Author: Steven Manolakis

Steven Manolakis

Member since: Dec 26, 2021
Published articles: 5

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