3. Establishing Shot
This is a picture in front of
the 6th Form block in
convent.
• An establishing shot is
usually the first shot of a
new scene, the purpose is
to show the audience
where the action is taking
place. It is usually a very
wide shot or extreme
wide shot
4. Wide Shot
This is a picture of a
car in a car park.
• In a Wide shot the
subject always takes
up the full frame.
the purpose is so
that nothing can be
out and everything
is included.
5. Medium Shot
• The mid shot shows
some part of the
subject in more
detail, whilst still
showing enough for
the audience to feel
as if they were
looking at the
whole subject. It is
mostly framed of a
characters torso.
6. Close up Shot
This is a close up
shot of a rose after
the rain (you can see
the raindrops on the
petals )
• In a close up shot
most of the the
frame takes up a
certain object.
There purpose is
to show specific
details very clearly.
7. Extreme Close up
This is a extreme close up
shot of my bike injury.
• Extreme close up
is a
shot that gets right in
and shows extreme
details.
8. POV (Point of view)
This is a picture of my point
of view of me typing on
keyboard.
•POV is a shot that
shows the view from a
persons perspective. So
that the audience can
see the exact sight that
a person sees
9. Over the shoulder shot
This is a picture taken of my little brother
facing the TV watching SpongeBob.
• Over the shoulder shot
is always taken behind a
person who is looking
at the subject. The
purpose is to establish
the position of each
person
10. Two Shot
This is a picture of two little
teddy bears.
• Two shot is a good
imagine that mostly
includes two people,
this shot is often
used in interviews or
when two presenters
are hosting a shot.
11. Over Head Shot
This is a picture of my little
brother watching tv.
• A over head shot is
taken above a
persons perspective,
this also shows the
audience more of
the view from the
top.
13. High Angle
This Picture shows 6 candles
around a baby pumpkin, the
shot was taken from the top.
• High angles show the
subjects from above,
this also makes them
appear less powerful
and less significant
14. Low Angle
This is a picture of a foundation taken
from the bottom making it look bigger.
• Low angle shots are
taken from below
• which makes the subject
look more powerful and
dominant as they appear
bigger
15. Canted/Oblique
• This is a picture of 2
birds in their cage.
• Canted/oblique
angle are when the
camera is not
placed horizontal
and the shot is
tilted.
17. Pan
This is a picture of my brother that feel asleep on the sofa.
• Pans is a movement which scans a scene horizontally. This is
done by placing the camera on a tripod which operates as a
stationary axis point ,as the camera is turned , it follows a
moving object which is kept in the middle of the frame.
18. Tilt
This is a picture of a drawing
on my wall from the top
to the bottom.
• This is a movement
which is similar to a
pan, however it films
vertically. It is used to
give the view more
detail about the
object, outfit etc.
19. Track
• A track is used to film every move and
adjust to the speed of what it is filming.
20. Zoom
This is zooming of a dried rose on the bottom left.
• Zooming is used so that the audience can take a closer
look at what they are viewing
21. Reverse Zoom
• This is when
you reverse the
zooming and
the object gets
smaller but the
whole image
gets bigger.
22. Dolly
This is a picture of a teddy using dolly movements
•
Dolly is when the camera moves in and out or forwards and backwards from
the object.
24. Symmetry balance
This is a picture of a iphone
• Symmetry adds
stability when
your in the
progress of
filming/taking a
picture. And
makes sure it isn't
wonky
25. Asymmetry Balance
• This is when the frame is unbalanced and the
both sides look different from each other.
26. Rule of Thirds
• This is used to
improve the
composition and
balance of your
images, making
them more
interesting and
dynamic. As you
can see in the
picture on the right.
27. Shallow Focus
This is a photo of my cats
paws.
• In shallow focus
one part of the
image is in focus
while the rest is
out of focus.
28. Deep Focus
• This is used
when you
want
everything in
good focus,
but sometimes
you might
want a object
to stand out.
29. Focus pulls
• The focus pull is useful for directing the viewer's
attention. So the focus pulls on one thing to make it
clearer and then it focuses to another thing.