If there’s one thing you need to learn in order to take great kid’s photos – it’s this.
What’s the difference between a kid’s photo that you remember and one you don’t? Generally speaking, an image that makes a concerted effort to choose a focal point and reinforces it by using various photography techniques makes for a more memorable image, as it gives the eye something to focus and linger on. So how do you incorporate focal points into your photography? Here are some suggestions:
What is the subject of your photo? Or rather, what is the dominant person or thing in your image? It could be your child, pet, car, house, etc., or it could be a tree, barn, stream, and so on. Decide what part of your image is the most important, as that will usually lead you to your focal point. For kids’ photography, the subject is your child or children most of the time – but that doesn’t mean you stick them in the middle of the frame and shoot. Keep reading!
Wait, didn’t you do this part already above? Sort of. Whether your subject can double as your focal point depends on how much room the subject takes up in your image, as the focal point is usually a small part of the image. If you were capturing a vast landscape and used a red barn as your focal point this would work well, but if the barn was taking up most of your image it couldn’t be a focal point, but something on the barn – a weathervane, window, door, etc. – could be.
The same goes for kids’ portrait photography, if you are taking a photograph of your child up close, then your child can be the subject, but not the focal point. Rather, something about your child – a smile, an eye, something they are holding – can serve as the focal point of the photo. For pulled back images (such as the feature image in this post), your child is also the focal point. Make sense? Now all you need to do is make them stand out from their surroundings.
Unfortunately, it’s not enough to simply decide on the focal point, you have to make it obvious to others. There are a few techniques you can use to “draw the eye” towards the focal point, such as:
Not sure how to employ these techniques in your photography? Stay tuned for more photography techniques to improve your images (or follow the links above to learn more about each technique). For now, practice incorporating focal points into your photos and see how it improves the resulting image.
Bonus tip: It can help to review images of other photographers – see how they place kids/people/objects in their images and use it for inspiration.