In today’s Toecabulary, we discuss the concept of ‘foreground’ in composition. The opposite of background in a photograph is the foreground. Read on to know more!
When the subject of your photograph itself is not focussed in the foreground but there are other elements that add more layers, leading an onlooker to the subject, you are using foreground to make your photograph more pleasing and dramatic than it could have been otherwise.
Watch this space for photographs that illustrate the charm that the foreground can bring to photography.
The eternal romance of sunsets and beaches. In this frame, the rocks dotting the shallow waters of a beach in Goa, India, make for a great foreground subject, adding a great sense of aestheticism. There is an alluring hinting at the grandeur of the whole image through this foreground, making the composition that much prettier than it could have been without the rocks.
This is a classic example of capturing a moment of a naturally dramatic scene in the wild. A few spotted deer running in the opposite direction of a tiger’s regal walk. Even as the tiger is the main subject, in focus, captured in the lovely golden light, the inclusion of the deer in the foreground tells a much more powerful and dramatic story, with the high grass in the background being out of focus.
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