Photography Composition
Theme Project: Travel
Lightroom
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Before
Black and white
Bringing the vibrant beauty of Michoacán, Mexico, to life, this stunning picture has been meticulously edited in Lightroom. I adjusted brightness, shadows, and color balance to highlight the vivid hues and details of the sky, resulting in a strikingly clear and dynamic view that reflects the scene’s essence as seen in person. Additionally, the black-and-white edit offers a contrasting mood, transforming the image with a timeless, dramatic feel that emphasizes form and texture in a fresh, compelling way.
color enhancing
Portrait lighting

Top Lighting

Under Lighting

Split Lighting
Explore the impact of various lighting techniques on mood and emotion in this collection. Top lighting casts a clean, dramatic effect from above, highlighting textures with a classic clarity. Underlighting shifts the mood with shadows from below, adding a mysterious, enigmatic quality. Finally, split lighting creates bold contrasts from the side, sculpting the subject and infusing the scene with intense energy and tension. Each technique uniquely alters the mood, revealing new dimensions in every image.
Aperture
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I'm learning manual photography and just started working with shutter speed. I took a few photos using different speeds to see how it affects motion and light. Slow shutter speeds made things look blurry, while fast ones made everything sharp. It's cool how one change can make such a big difference.
Shutter speed
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I'm learning manual photography and just started working with shutter speed. I took a few photos using different speeds to see how it affects motion and light. Slow shutter speeds made things look blurry, while fast ones made everything sharp. It's cool how one change can make such a big difference.
ISO
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"ISO felt like unlocking a hidden layer in photography. I tested different levels to see how my camera sees light in dark and bright settings. Each photo came out with its own texture, some smooth and clear, others gritty and raw. It’s like adjusting the photo’s energy before even pressing the shutter."





















