Best Position for Taking Picture with Camera Phones

  The steadier you hold your cameraphone, the less likely you are to get blurry photos. One trick is holding the camera phone with both hands or lean your camera phone against a solid object, such as a tree or a wall, when taking shots.

Keep in mind that many camera phones also suffer from shutter lag, a delay between the moment you press the shutter button and when the camera has captured the image. The clicking sound doesn't mean that the phone has captured the photo, it just indicates that you pressed the shutter. Be sure to hold the phone still a few seconds after you hit the shutter to account for any delay.

Use different angle. You have the flexibility to shoot the same subject and setting in different angles. Try any angles that you can think of and then choose the one that best compliments the mood and setting. Try to take pictures at eye level. Always shoot the subject at its eye level, not yours.

Do you have a plan an outdoor photo shoot with your camera phone? Based on the type of light, these are the golden time to take a specific type of outdoor photograph:

5am: Pre-dawn: Ethereal light and dreamy mist for lakes, rivers and landscapes.
6-7am: Dawn: Crisp, golden light for east-facing subjects.
7am-10am: Early morning: The city comes to life
4pm-6:45pm: Late Afternoon: Terrific warm, golden light on west-facing subjects. Best time for landscapes and people, particularly one hour before sunset.
6:45 - 7:30pm: Sunset: Great skies 10 minutes before and 10 minutes after sunset.

Tips &
Technique:


 

Lighting
Distance
Position
Settings
Zooming
Composition
Maintenance
Editing

EXIF
Shutter Speed
ISO Speed

 

 

 

 

 

 

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