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The Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos
 
 
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The Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos (Paperback)

by Michael Freeman (Author)
Key Phrases: street photography, diminishing perspective, Ansel Adams, Edward Weston, Golden Section (more...)
4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (81 customer reviews)

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The Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos + Understanding Exposure: How to Shoot Great Photographs with a Film or Digital Camera (Updated Edition) + Learning to See Creatively: Design, Color & Composition in Photography (Updated Edition)
Price For All Three: $54.03

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Editorial Reviews

Review
"Beautifully presented with genrous and helpful color illustrations, this book is a very affordable addition to the library of the serious photographer."
-Candian Camera (Feb. 08)

Product Description
Design is the single most important factor in creating a successful photograph. The ability to see the potential for a strong picture and then organize the graphic elements into an effective, compelling composition has always been one of the key skills in making photographs.
Digital photography has brought a new, exciting aspect to design - first because the instant feedback from a digital camera allows immediate appraisal and improvement; and second because image-editing tools make it possible to alter and enhance the design after the shutter has been pressed. This has had a profound effect on the way digital photographers take pictures.
The Photographer's Eye shows how anyone can develop the ability to see and shoot great digital photographs. The book explores all the traditional approaches to composition and design, but crucially, it also addresses the new digital technique of shooting in the knowledge that a picture will later be edited, manipulated, or montaged to result in a final image that may be very different from the one seen in the viewfinder.

Features
*Covers both traditional in-camera composition and the new opportunities for picture-making made possible by digital imaging editing
*Shows how to explore situations and locations in order to find the best possible photographic possibilities
*Uses clear examples from real photographic assignments, with schematic illustrations of how and why the pictures work


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Focal Press; 1 edition (June 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0240809343
  • ISBN-13: 978-0240809342
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 9.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (81 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #590 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #4 in  Books > Arts & Photography > Photography > How-to
    #8 in  Books > Computers & Internet > Digital Photography & Video > Digital Photography
    #9 in  Books > Arts & Photography > Photography > Digital Photography

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81 Reviews
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219 of 222 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Single Volume on Design and Composition in Photography, June 14, 2007
This is the best single volume on visual design and composition in years. Painters need a book this good. Freeman's earlier book from the 1980s, "Image," had long held the status, IMHO, of being the best single volume. His new book surpasses the older one by a significant margin.

Freeman is one of very few photographers, or artists of any ilk, who can articulate their art-related thoughts in concrete, accurate, analytical ways, and not in the jargon of so much of what is written about art that lacks any actual content. Not only is he an outstandingly gifted photographer, with dozens of books to his credit, but one who has mastered the grammar of images and is one of the few who can describe how and why visual phenomena work.

This is the most complete volume on this subject out there in terms of numbers of topics introduced and discussed at a reasonable length. It is also the most effective melding of the insights of current Gestalt perception theory with traditional design elements/principles in print. The first 60% of the book deals with the more concrete aspects of designing an image.

The last two chapters marry the other part of composing that is harder to articulate well: the message in a image, or the photographer's intent. Only in this book has an author attempted to define major categories of intent in making an image. And then categorizes the physical and mental aspects of how a photographer goes after, constructs, or recognizes an image - the process.

Throughout the discussions he introduces those aspects of digital imaging that a photographer can use to influence a picture's design. Perhaps the most powerful development is that digital in-camera and post processing technologies allow the photographer to apply to color images all those image control aspects formerly available only in the wet chemistry darkroom to monochrome images, as well as many more.

Make no mistake.... This is a book for readers. One cannot get all of this book's benefit from the illustrations alone, in the manner of so many "how-to" art and photography books these days that have pictures, but little text. But this is the book to which thoughtful photographers will return over and over for many years.

The only way it can be significantly better would be to have twice as many pages. It would make a wonderful textbook for any studio art, photography, art history, or art appreciation course in high school or college/university.

5 May 2009, update. The number of reviews, number of responses to reviews, and other sources of information indicate that this book is a certifiable best-seller among photography books. The response to this book indicates that there is a large market for information about the structure of images and for effective writing on that difficult, intangible interplay between design and content, or of structure and expression/message.

My hope is that Freeman and other capable author/photographers will publish books delving further into the composition problem. To date, the in-print situation is grim. This one, Mante's, and Hoffmann's books are about the only ones yet in English that deal with composing photographs at higher than the most elementary levels. Together these three books comprise quite a strong presentation at the intermediate level of image structure and of various approaches to imparting meaning and expression in one's images.

There is more, though, that can be said. To date there is no thorough look at the role of similarity and proportion in causing a viewer's eye to move through an image. That is to say, which characteristics among, shape, size, tone, color, direction, etc., assume priority in one's eye in which combinations, and how does proportionality, or violations thereof, work?

To date, this reviewer cannot find any published research that updates Alfred Yarbis's ground breaking insights into eye movement in images from the 1950s and 1960s. His work is quoted to this day as the definitive study in this field. His results seem to imply that many artists' assertions about the role of "leading lines" may be nothing but bunk.

Do light tones and bright colors really appear to project toward a viewer and darks recede? A Russian scientist has a considerable argument that, in fact, darks are what appears to "project" and lights recede. His work is not available in English.

Is the success or failure of an image still articulable only at the level of intangibles? At this point in the history of the arts and contributions from visual psychology and brain studies, one should be able to make specific assertions about structure and its role in the success or failure of carrying the artist's expression or meaning.

Unfortunately, there are very few artists or photographers who also write who can focus clearly enough on these nitty-gritty issues to make statements that have actual meaning. An inordinate percentage of writing about the arts still reduces to hand waving and ranting: always has, always will, it seems.

It is one of Freeman's gifts that he can write analytically and be a very successful, versatile artist. This book's success indicates that the demand is there for hard-hitting information on images. Three authors does not amount to much of a supply.


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129 of 129 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Easily the Best Photo Design/Composition Book Available, November 3, 2007
Let me start by saying that even though I write photo books for a living (including The Joy of Digital Photography (Lark Photography Book), I don't know Michael Freeman and have never communicated with him. That said, this is easily the best composition and design book that you'll find--and that goes for professionals as well as hobbyists. This is the first book, in fact, that I can recall that covers these topics with such depth and clarity of thought.

Freeman has long been one of my favorite photo book writers and this book continues his long streak of great reads (his other recent book, The Complete Guide to Digital Photography is also worth owning).I sometimes laugh at how extremely British his writing is, but it's just amusing, not distracting.

The main thing that I like about The Photographer's Eye is that Freeman approaches the subject from a very thoughtful perspective. While the book covers the basic elements (lines, shapes, dynamic tension, balance, etc.) he also talks at length about more emotionally-related issues: chiaroscuro and key, the search for order, reactive thought, etc. These are the concepts that more experienced photographers (and artists) find themselves confronting once they have a solid feel for design elements and construction.

I often find myself wondering if design is more of a thoughtful process or an instinctive one--and I think it's a combination of the two. In reading this book, in fact, I can see better the value in taking an objective and analytical look a how great compositions are made and how we can take scenes that we react to instinctively and find quick and useful ways to turn them into dynamic photos. Very often when you find a great subject you don't have the luxury of time to decide how to construct the image to "get" what you see.

That is the value of studying composition and image design: to prepare you to make fast decisions. If you are hiking in the deserts outside of Tucson, for example, and you come across a great potential silhouette of a saguaro cactus at sunset, you have only two or three minutes to organize the elments, choose the best viewpoint, the best lens and then make the exposure. It's tragic to spend day after day exploring for powerful images and then only come close.

Freeman's book is crammed with an extraordinary number of great photos with a vast emotional and geographic diversity. These are world-class images, not just "how-to" examples and it's hard to imagine one photographer coming up with all of these great photos. As I said, I write and illustrate photo books myself and I am awed at times by Freeman's proflific work.

If you're looking for a book on design, don't let $20 stand between you and all of this great knowledge and hundreds of fine examples (something I might say of my own book, as well!). Just buy the book--or ask you library to order it.
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46 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Must have book on understanding photographich comp, July 30, 2007
By Patrick Holt "txdragon" (San Antonio, TX USA) - See all my reviews
  
Ok anytime you talk aboutPhotographic composition and rules for it, you get into a grey area since art is subjective by nature. What the author does here is show his photos and explain what composition techniques he used and why he thinks they work. The book is very comprehensive and offers numerous example. The print quality is excellent as it is in most Focal press book. If you want a book that explains photographic compositional theory and offers great examples to demonstrate the concepts, then this is the book you need.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The Photographer's Eye by Michael Freeman
Can't recommend highly enough! The only one of its kind that is different than any other book. A must read!
Published 20 days ago by Binh Pham

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book on Composition
This book deals with a tough topic because art is subjective and composition can relate to personal preference. Read more
Published 22 days ago by M. Anderson

5.0 out of 5 stars Exactly what I was looking for!
The Photographer's Eye is impressive. It zeroes in on the aesthetics of photography but in a practical, hands-on way that I am finding extremely helpful. Read more
Published 26 days ago by PT

5.0 out of 5 stars he Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos
Fantastic! L love it. It really lays out the concepts in a simple way. A real eye opener. But it!
Published 1 month ago by Denis Avery

3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent content, writing needs improvement
I tend to think of photography as being composed of 2 things - the technical basis of photography and the art of photography. Read more
Published 1 month ago by REG

5.0 out of 5 stars An instant classic.
This is the second book by Michael Freeman I have read -- third if you count The Image, which was published many years ago. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Grampa

5.0 out of 5 stars An insightful guide to practical photograpy
The Photographer's eye is a little jewel about composition by combining well-structured and focused explanations with clear photograph examples. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Alejandro Blanco

4.0 out of 5 stars must to read
photography, like the rest of arts, is based on artistic bases. it took already a long time to formalize such bases while mainly based on senses. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Amr A. Younis

3.0 out of 5 stars Good photos, writing could use improvement
My first criteria for rating a book is whether I'd buy another by the same author. In this case, I would probably seek out another author due to the writing style in "The... Read more
Published 2 months ago by CE Johnson

3.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Concept with Mediocre Writing
I have read a lot of photography books, so I have to agree with a few other reviewers who found "The Photographer's Eye" hard to digest. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Jimmy Jay

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