Take 20 photographs as vertical first. Then take the same subjects as horizontal again.
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I didn't do this project properly. I was supposed to take 20 portrait format photographs and study the photographs before taking the landscape format photographs of the same subjects. However, I thought it would be difficult to take the photographs of the same subjects after I went back home because the light condition would change and more importantly it is impossible to remember the place where I took the original photographs in this large park. Therefore, I decided to change the procedure as follows: First, look for a subject with the portrait format frame in mind and take a photograph of the subject in the portrait format. Then immediately after that, take another photograph of the same subject in the landscape format. The results are as follows:
1.





















When taking the portrait format photographs, I do find the tendency to put the main (dominant) subjects lower than the centre, as the text book points out. However, it is probably true that the same thing can also be said when taking a photographs in the landscape format. Since the portrait format is vertically longer than the landscape format, the tendency looks more obvious.
As for the landscape format, it is certainly true that I was looking for subjects whose shapes were vertically long. Then I tried to compose the subjects so that they fit in the landscape format frame. Some worked better than others. I don't think tree trunks work (1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 10, 12, 13 and 15) (Yes, I took too many photographs of trunks). The subjects which can be represented by points rather than vertical lines work better (7, 9, 14, 17 and 20) as well as the ones which can be represented by areas (5, 6, 11, 16, 18, 19 and 21).
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