The horizon is an essential element in almost any landscape photography, it can go unnoticed by the photographer, but if it appears in the photo it will always leave a clear mark on it, the objective of this week is to capture the horizon as the main protagonist. of the composition.
Every week I will propose a new challenge, it is a topic that you will have to capture in photo and upload it to the Facebook page of the blog by putting in the description the keyword that I will indicate for each topic. Topics range from portraits to macrophotography, landscapes, black and white photography, or babies. The themes will be offered on Saturday, so you have the whole weekend to work. You’ll have one week to upload your photo (one photo per participant), until Friday of the following week. Friday or Saturday I will update the article with the photo that most captivated me and propose a new theme, and so on?
- This week.
- The challenge is to focus the photography on the horizon.
- Highlighting its aesthetics and giving it an important place in the frame.
- Although landscape photography is par excellence in which the skyline will be the most present.
- Really any photograph in which it is position the horizon.
- Out will be valid for the challenge.
Do you remember the rule of thirds in relation to the horizon: respect it and apply it so that your photo is visually correct and well distributed, or omit it if you master it and know what you are doing?
As usual, to participate in this week’s challenge, take your photo to the Facebook wall of the Photographers Blog: In the photo description, please mention the keyword “Challenge Horizons” and follow a title of your choice.
For those who are not from Facebook, I have enabled the participation of new social networks.
Good photo
This week we enjoyed some splendid photographs in which the horizon was the main protagonist, here are some examples of photos that deserve to appear in this update:
Laguna de Unare, by Marco Gómez, is this the photo of the week? Five layers that make up the horizontal composition, with a marked horizon formed by trees. The visual weight is perfectly distributed, the lower half is occupied by birds and flamingos that inevitably attract attention, while the upper half offers a negative space that compensates for the chaos of the lower part.
Very accurate picture. Thank you Marco for sharing it.