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TT January 13, 2009 at 5:55 pm

10 tips on photographing children

Receive a digital camera over the holidays? If you’d like to take better pictures of your kids or grandchildren, Kodak Canada has provided a handful of easy-to-implment tips.


Kodak_tipsReceive a digital camera over the holidays? If you’d like to take better pictures of your kids or grandchildren, Kodak Canada has provided a handful of easy-to-implment tips.

Kodak Canada has compiled a list of 10 simple tips for photographing children, serving as a perfect primer for novice users. Here they are:

1.  Kids are always climbing, building, exploring, trying out new things. Don’t just photograph them on holidays and birthdays. Make picture-taking a part of your everyday life.

2. Begin a photo tradition. Take pictures regularly so that you, your family, and friends can see how much your child has changed. Capture your child setting off for the first day of school each year. Or mark your child’s growth against a tree as you watch your child and the tree grow. Or every Father’s Day, surround Granddad with all the grandkids.

3. Be patient. Don’t expect to get the perfect shot immediately. Sit back and wait for the right moment, then shoot quickly.

4. Shoot at eye level. Eye-to-eye contact is as engaging in a picture as in real life. So try sitting on the ground and snapping some photos from the child’s perspective. Expressions will look more natural, your flash photos will be more evenly lit from nose to toe, and the background will probably look a lot better, too. This also works great for pets!

5. Take candid pictures. Ignore the impulse to force your subjects to always pose staring at the camera. Variety is important. Take candid pictures to show them working, playing, leaning against a banister chatting, or relaxing.

6. Include friends. Don’t forget to include your kids’ friends in some of your pictures. In years to come, these pictures will remind them of happy times and the bonds that were so strong. "Look! That was right after Carrie tried to cut her own hair!" "Whatever happened to Tyler?" "I wonder what we were giggling about."

7. Get close. Fill the camera’s viewfinder or LCD display with your subject to create pictures with greater impact. Step in close or use your camera’s zoom to emphasize what is important and exclude the rest. Check the manual for your camera’s closest focusing distance.

8. Lock the focus. A picture of several people can come out blurry because most auto-focus cameras focus on the area in the center of the viewfinder. When photographing two people, this can spell disaster—the tree in the background will be in perfect focus, and your subjects blurry. To remedy this, lock the focus on the subject. Usually you do this by centering the subject in the viewfinder and then pressing the shutter button halfway down. Continue holding the button halfway down while you move the camera until your subject is where you want it in the viewfinder. When you are satisfied, press the button all the way down to take the picture.

9. Let kids record their world. It’s a whole new world when seen through a child’s eyes. One-time-use cameras and digital cameras provide easy ways to let kids take pictures of each other and to capture what’s important to them. You might just be surprised!

10. Place your subject off-centre. Placing your subject to one side of the frame can make the composition more interesting and dynamic. But if your camera is an auto-focus model, the picture may turn out blurry because those cameras focus on whatever is in the center of the viewfinder. Check your camera manual for how to use the focus lock feature to prefocus on the subject. Usually it is done by pressing the shutter button halfway down and then recomposing the picture while still holding the button halfway down.


Filed Under: Photography




Comments (4)

  • k.g says:

    texting is not good for any student because they become used to spelling a way we on texting;abriv. or acronims for example. then in school their spelling becomes the pits. so when it come to written language, its not good but then again we have computer that do correct all spelling mistakes….omg, wutz dis world cumin 2!

    (Report comment)

  • Mary Elliott says:

    I think the girls parents should take away her cell phone and only give it back when she can show proper responsibility for her actions. Maybe she should hace to pay for the cell phone bill for a couple of months then maybe she would understand where her parents are coming from. Children today DO NOT UNDERSTAND RESPONSIBILITY.

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  • L.K. says:

    I don't mean to offend any of the parents here or anything but why is this such a big deal? It's only $30 a month to pay regardless if she sends 100 texts or 14,000 texts. I'm sure most teenagers these days can manage their spelling just fine. At least she isn't getting into drugs or anything. There are worse things in the world.

    (Report comment)

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