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Which button is for the composition mode?

Making Pictures With Professional Photographer John Enman
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Composition deals with perspective and the relationship you create between subjects in the foreground and background of your picture.

Which button is for the composition mode?

Yes, I did get asked that question the other day, but it is not as silly as it first sounds. I’ll go back to the conversation from which it comes.

A customer stopped by my shop wanting to get a different camera other than the one he had been using for over 20 years.

I was showing him a couple of cameras and explaining the different modes like “aperture priority”, “shutter priority”, “program” and “manual” when he made the statement, “All that seems a bit complicated, just show me which button is for the composition mode because mostly I like taking scenics”.

The other customer in the store stopped her browsing, turned, and just looked at me. I’m not sure if she was troubled by his statement, or also wanted to know about this secret button.

I replied, “Composition is what you do, not the camera, to position your subject within the viewfinder frame,” and added, “Composition also deals with perspective and the relationship you create between subjects in the foreground and background.”

Does all that seem too complicated of an answer?

I was making squares and rectangles with my hand and moving things around on the counter as I explained it hoping to make it clear to him.

However, now let us go back to his question of the “composition button” and what he was trying to achieve with his camera. Remember his last camera was from the 1970’s. Even auto focus was new to him.

Cameras programmed since the 1980s are pretty capable of getting the exposure correct in all but the most contrasty lighting conditions.

If he were to get serious now that he was about to get a DSLR he would be trying to discover how other successful photographers compose a scenic.

Or he would be doing some reading, joining a camera club, or taking some classes that would teach him composition.

My impression was that he just liked to take pictures and capture memories of the places he has been.

So I think either the mode with the “little mountains”, or with the “running person” on the dial of the camera I was showing him would give him exactly what he was looking for and we could, if he wanted to, call them composition modes.

The exposure mode I feel most comfortable with is manual, and I am continually thumbing through the different menus on my camera to reset things.  I make my living using a camera, so I have a camera in my hand a lot of the time.

I think each of us needs to use our cameras in ways that make us comfortable.  Especially so that we won’t happen to be confused and experimenting with the settings at that moment when the action happens in front of our camera.

I used to call that a “Kodak moment”. Hmmm, I think I need to find a new phrase now that I am no longer using Kodak films and that company has pretty much disappeared.

In any event, I recommended that he not worry too much about composition, and experiment with the different modes his camera has to offer other than “P”. Hopefully he’ll stop by again and I can get him using his DSLR as more than just a point and shoot camera.

In closing this article that started with thoughts of composition, I particularly like this quote of Alexander Lee Nyerges of the Art Institute of Dayton, Ohio, when discussing an exhibition of Ansel Adams of the American West.

“His landscapes were operatic in composition, complete with lighting, tragedy and drama – luring those who viewed his works to seek Nature and capture the spirit of the wilderness.”

I am certain Adams had a special button for composition.

These are my thoughts for this week. Contact me at www.enmanscamera.com or emcam@telus.net. Stop by Enman’s Camera at 423 Tranquille Road in Kamloops. And if you want an experienced photographer please call me at 250-371-3069. I also sell an interesting selection of used photographic equipment.