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Tips for Photographing New York's
Outdoor Sculpture
To print multiple copies from PDF files, click
here for front and
here for back.
To take great
photos of New York's magnificent outdoor works of art, try the
following.
1. Weather:
Hope for overcast skies, or look for sculptures that are in shadow. The
sharp contrasts of bright sunlight on bronze or marble make your camera
lose detail in either dark or light areas.
2. Composition:
Try to get a good view of the sculpture's head, in profile or 3/4 view
rather than a full-frontal mug shot.
3. Background:
Look methodically for distractions. In New York, the most frequent
offenders are street signs, tree branches and pigeons. Shift your
position to get as many of them out of the picture as possible.
4. Zoom:
Use the
optical zoom (never the digital) to fill the lens with the sculpture
or a detail of it. To prevent distortion, stand back as far as you can
and zoom as much as your camera allows.
5. Spot metering
or center-weighted metering: Set your camera to meter the light only at
the center of the frame. Aim the center mark in your viewfinder at a
big, solid chunk of statue (the sky will fade almost to white), press
the shutter halfway down, and shift the camera back to treeless,
pigeonless, signless image you composed before. If this doesn't produce
an image with good detail, try using the exposure bracketing function
(still center-weighted), if your camera has one.
6. Simplify:
If you can't avoid all distractions, change the color mode to B&W or
sepia tone; many distractions will immediately be much less visible. Or
try zooming in on interesting details rather than capturing the whole
sculpture.
For a longer essay on this
subject, with photos,
click here.
To find Manhattan's most
gorgeous sculptures, read
Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide, by Dianne
Durante, available at local bookstores, from
New York University Press, and from
Amazon and other online retailers (ISBN 978-0-8147-1987-9)
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