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Chapter 12: Taking Great Pictures
Microsoft Digital Image Standard User’s Manual
3. Capture a Moment in the Story
Consider driver’s license and passport photos. We think of these as uninterest-
ing and unrepresentative of how people usually look. Why are these photos
dull?
One problem with these photos (but certainly not the only problem) is that
they capture people out of their element, without context or a story. There are
no interesting details in the background to draw in the viewer, and the subject
often looks impatient or uncomfortable.
When you are the photographer, you can strive to capture people, events, and
places that tell a story. In addition to having your subject look natural and not
posed, details in front of the subject or in the background can stimulate the
imagination to re-create the story of the photo.
This photo captures the destruction of an earthquake just hours after the event. Since the
photo was taken before the rubble was cleared away, the photographer was able to capture
the many details of the scene that tell the story.
With enough of these details, and a strong relationship between your subject
and the other elements, the photo can suggest ideas that are not even in the
frame. You can take the old cliché "A picture paints a thousand words," and
make it your goal to paint more than a thousand words with your photographs.










