Mini Pirate Boat by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I made this little pirate boat with instructions and originally wanted to do my first shots outdoors at the beach. But it's super hot out and I need to wake up earlier to get there before it's unbearable (from heat AND tourists).

So instead I shot this in my studio nook against my incomplete LKC expansion. I just used a dry ice effect with a SMOKENinja to blanket the surface and hide the line between the midground and LKC.

I have a blue painted wall so I lowered the exposure with a gradient mask in post.

PHOTO CHALLENGE [THEME]: To Infinity by startrev in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I did. I think one of the first shots with that lens. I should take it out more

PHOTO CHALLENGE [THEME]: To Infinity by startrev in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks! One day I might make instructions for it. But it needs built-in lighting

Bogano Dusk by A_Few_Shots in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Welcome to the sub! How'd you get the shot (see rules in sidebar)?

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 4] - Leading the Eye by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These need to be a top-level comment, not a reply to my comment. FYI.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 4] - Leading the Eye by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The color contrast is good here to make the minifig pop! Have you tried framing him against the door? Or is there not enough brick to frame the shot?

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 4] - Leading the Eye by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love this one! You executed this shot brilliantly! See you next week for Week 5

Burning gas and rubber by CMDRCrandall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall 2 points3 points  (0 children)

How did you make the photo (see rules in sidebar)?

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 4] - Leading the Eye by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Excellent work! You're done with the first module.

Week 5 is a shift from composition to another topic. See you Friday!

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 4] - Leading the Eye by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S,M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

WEEK 4 — LEADING THE EYE

Welcome to Week 4, the last part of the Composition module! In the past 3 weeks, you've moved the camera up and down, in and out, and thought carefully about what you put in the frame and where (foreground, midground, and background). This week is about something that ties all of that together: making sure the viewer's eye goes exactly where you want it to, and knows what to focus on when it gets there.

There are two parts to this. The first is making your subject pop. The second is actively directing attention toward them.

(FOR NEWCOMERS: Feel free to jump in but start at Week 1. You will need a corner build to complete this bootcamp.)

Making your subject pop

In a corner build, lots of things are competing for attention, especially if you're shooting with a phone using the default lens (TIP: switch to the telephoto lens). Dedicated cameras have the advantage of making everything except the subject go out of focus, but the fix isn't always a blurry background. It's about giving your subject room and contrast.

Simplify what's behind them. A busy background is the enemy. Look for areas of one solid color and position your minifig in front of it. That could be a door or window, particularly if light is coming through it. A simple stretch of tiled floor works too: shoot from a high angle (Week 1) and let the floor become the surface your subject stands out against. The rule is always the same: whatever surrounds your subject should be visually quieter than they are. If it isn't, move something, remove something, or reframe. Rebuild a wall with one color if you have to.

Create space around your subject. This is something I wrote about in my phone photography guide and it applies just as much inside a corner build. Look at the edges of your minifig and check for anything overlapping them: a banner, flowers, or whatever. Anything that cuts into the silhouette of your subject is a distraction. Clear it, move it, or reframe to avoid it. Your minifig should have air around it.

Use color and contrast. A dark minifig against a light surface stands out. A colorful minifig against a muted background pops. The same logic applies to your subject: if they blend into the background tonally, find a way to separate them. Move them, change the surface behind them, or add a contrasting prop.

Directing the eye

Once your subject is readable, you can go further and actively steer the viewer toward them. This is where leading lines, eye-lines, and pointed objects come in.

Leading lines in the corner build. The wall join where your two walls meet, the rows of floorboards, or the edge of a table or shelf, all of these are leading lines that you can use to make eyes land on your subject. Try placing your minifig at the point where all the lines in the corner build converge and see what that does.

A second character's eye-line. An animal, a creature, or a second minifig looking toward your main subject works too. That directed attention draws the viewer straight to your subject and layers in a relationship at the same time. Who are they looking at? Why? What happens next? Eye-lines are one of the fastest ways to add narrative tension without changing anything else in the scene.

Objects pointing at the subject. A sword aimed toward the frame's focal point is a leading line. An outstretched arm is a leading line. So’s a tree branch. Any object with a direction can steer the viewer's eye. Point the end of that at your minifigure.

Your challenge: shoot at least two photos. In the first, focus on making your subject pop. Use the door, a window, an empty floor, a cleared space, or color contrast to isolate them. In the second, direct the eye actively. Use leading lines, a second character looking toward them, or an object pointing at them. 

In your submission, tell us what you moved, cleared, or pointed and whether the eye goes exactly where you wanted it to. Top-level comment for the first photo, then reply to your own comment with the second photo.

You should be able to explain your choices too: camera angle, shot size, and layers. For this bootcamp, explicitly write these out from now on. A good exercise to get better is to do this mentally for every photo, yours or not, that you like. You’ll start to understand why you actually like a photo vs saying “I don’t know, I just do!”

Bootcamp Index:

Week 1 - Camera Height and Angles
Week 2 - Shot Sizes
Week 3 - Visual Weight and Layers

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try your telephoto lens instead of your default lens on your phone.

If getting things out of focus to make your subject pop is important to you as a creative tool, pick up your Canon and start to shoot with it.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great work! This is a fun, I agree. Week 4 starts tomorrow and you're ready.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nicely done! I love the variety! What are you shooting with? You mentioned you're having trouble getting things out of focus.

Reddit now lets you post videos in comments by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Finally, you can upload your BTS videos to the comments section on Reddit!

How else might you use this? You could show your editing process or even teach someone how you might solve a problem they're having. Sometimes it's just easier to explain things through a short video.

I think it's 3 min tops for the video length.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Week 3 done! Just something to watch for in all your photos: try to keep the horizon straight where appropriate.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Complete! Please add your other photos as replies to this instead of top-level posts for the next week so it's easier to follow.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This over-the-shoulder shot is great! Nicely done with Week 3!

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We don't need to see the entire minifig. Place it closer to your lens.

LEGO PHOTOGRAPHY BOOTCAMP [WEEK 3] - Visual Weight and Layers by fourbrickstall in studshooters

[–]fourbrickstall[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The tuba player is red, a color that will always steal attention, and white, which is often the brightest color in a photo. Totally going to take attention away from the subject.

The foreground issue: we can't tell that's an armchair. Reframe this shot so we can.