11. The easiest way to improve your photography is to work on the angle and composition.
12. Learn the fundamentals of composition, get comfortable using them, and then learn how to break them. You must know the rules before you can break them.
13. Turn on the gridlines until you start thinking about any scene in terms of the grid.
14. Practice composition with simple photos that have a lot of empty space. Large open areas are perfect places to start with iPhone photography.
15. Always ask yourself what the main subject of your photo is, or what is the first thing that the viewer will notice. If there is no subject, is it really worth taking that shot?
16. Your composition should emphasize the main subject or subjects. And no, your subject should not be in the center of the frame.
17. Placing your subject even slightly off the center will greatly enhance most photos.
18. Think about photos in terms of balance. If you put your main subject in one corner of the image, you also want to have something of interest in the opposite corner to keep the composition balanced.
19. Turn on HDR for landscape photography and when sky takes up a large part of your photo.
20. Don't use HDR for photos of movement and when you need to take many photos quickly.
21. Shoot against strong backlight (e.g. sunset sky) to create silhouettes.
22. Learn to quickly adjust focus and exposure - and how to lock it by holding down your finger.
23. Never use digital zoom. Zoom with your feet or crop your photos afterwards.
24. Use volume buttons for a camera-like shooting experience.
25. Use the volume buttons on your headphones for remote shutter release - or to stay discreet when taking photos in public.
11. The easiest way to improve your photography is to work on the angle and composition.
12. Learn the fundamentals of composition, get comfortable using them, and then learn how to break them. You must know the rules before you can break them.
13. Turn on the gridlines until you start thinking about any scene in terms of the grid.
14. Practice composition with simple photos that have a lot of empty space. Large open areas are perfect places to start with iPhone photography.
15. Always ask yourself what the main subject of your photo is, or what is the first thing that the viewer will notice. If there is no subject, is it really worth taking that shot?
16. Your composition should emphasize the main subject or subjects. And no, your subject should not be in the center of the frame.
17. Placing your subject even slightly off the center will greatly enhance most photos.
18. Think about photos in terms of balance. If you put your main subject in one corner of the image, you also want to have something of interest in the opposite corner to keep the composition balanced.
19. Turn on HDR for landscape photography and when sky takes up a large part of your photo.
20. Don't use HDR for photos of movement and when you need to take many photos quickly.
21. Shoot against strong backlight (e.g. sunset sky) to create silhouettes.
22. Learn to quickly adjust focus and exposure - and how to lock it by holding down your finger.
23. Never use digital zoom. Zoom with your feet or crop your photos afterwards.
24. Use volume buttons for a camera-like shooting experience.
25. Use the volume buttons on your headphones for remote shutter release - or to stay discreet when taking photos in public.
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