1. Effects of shutter speed: represents the time that the shutter remains open when taking a photograph, it determines the amount of light that reaches the film or sensor
2. Panning : is to capture a moving object while its just focused on the
3. Architectural Photography: its best will convey the experience of being in and around a built environment
4. Sports and Action Photography: is all about timing. Its about reacting. Its about being in the right place at the right time and its about execute. Understanding the timing of these predictable actions allows you to capture the peak moment, when the action is most dramatic.
5. Portrait photography: the focus of the photograph is the person’s face, although the entire body and the background may be included. A portrait is generally not a snapshot, but a composed image of a person in a still position. A portrait often shows a person looking directly at the camera.
6. Spread: Its two pages and it connects both together.
7. Pica: Its makes the picture the size that you want it as the box in the spread.
8. Eyeline: Its strats from looking at the biggest picture then it goes from right, bottom, then left back to the center.
9. Dominant photo: Everything is focused on that picture while everything surronding it combines it together.
10. Caption: Tells the story of the picture.
11. Internal Margins: The sizes and how its supposed to be placed
12. News Elements: a simple, clear statement that makes up the first paragraph or two of your story. It advertised what is coming in the story. It is sometimes spelled lede.
Immediate identification: This lead focuses on the “who” when it comes to the six basic questions. Use this approach when someone important is making news.
Delayed identification: In this lead, the “who” is not immediately identified by name. Instead, the “who” is identified by an occupation, city or job title. Use this approach when the person involved has little name recognition among readers.Summary: The lead in this case is a synopsis of two or more actions. Reporters who deal with several important elements may choose to sum up what happened rather than highlight a specific action. His is one type of lead where a general statement is preferable to a specific action.
Multiple elements: This lead reports on two or more newsworthy elements. In some stories, choosing one theme is too restrictive. A multiple-element lead allows the reporter to work more information into the first paragraph.
Leads with flair: Use this type of lead when you want to emphasize novelty. It deviates slightly from the inverted pyramid approach.
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