5 Ways To Be More Creative With Transport Shots
Photo by David Burleson
Add A Vignette
To create mood and to add emphasis apply a vignette to your transport shots. For more information on how to do this, take a look at our tutorial: Creating Vignettes.
Shoot Inside
As well as shooting the outside, if you can, open the doors of the car, truck or of whatever transport you’re photographing and capture some interior shots. You can go wide, capturing the whole of the interior or use a close-up lens to focus on detail such as dials, buttons and badges.
Fill The Frame
To really add emphasis so the car is the only focal point of the shot, fill the frame with it. This, however, doesn’t mean it has to be positioned in the centre of the shot. Move your position slightly to the left or right and you’ll see how it can make a really big difference to the overall image. Just make sure you don’t clip off a wing mirror or a wheel in the process.
Photo by David Burleson
Use Reflections
Try using the car’s mirrors or some part of its bodywork to capture a reflection of another part of the car in. Just have a good look at the reflection to make sure you or any passers-by aren’t captured in the shot as you’ll have to spend time cloning them out later if you do.
Away from the car look for puddles and other reflective surfaces you can photograph. New buildings, which are full of glass and steel, are great backdrops to position new cars against.
Stepping further back so you can see the reflection of the horizon down the side of the car can also work brilliantly, particularly at sunset or if you’re in a picturesque location.
Photo by David Burleson
Change Angles
Take a walk around the mode of transport you’re photographing and look for the angles, shapes and little details that make it unique.
Get low to headlight level to make it look intimidating while shooting from the side will give you the chance to follow the lines of the car’s bodywork which will help guide the eye through the shot.
Shoot up high so you can show the car’s overall shape, just make sure the sky’s not overexposed. You can always fit an ND grad to darken the sky, creating more mood. For wider shots, make sure you can’t see what’s behind the car from underneath it as this will be distracting.
Source: Photography News
5 Ways To Be More Creative With Transport Shots
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