14.10.2017

Instagram has more than 300 million active users - approximately the population of all the United States. And among them is a tiny set of super-users who always seem better and live a more photogenic life than the rest of us.
Well, it turns out, this is a lie. Or do not lie exactly, but this is the result of a lot of effort and editing. Photographers are used to "correct" the image by editing, and they are transferring this way of thinking to their Instagram accounts. Bloggers and fashion celebrities have a few tricks to do their daily work. (This makes sense, given that a blogger can pay $ 15,000 just to wear a brand in Instagram message.)
Here are a few simple tips from bloggers and photographers to the Instagram game.
Do not use the Instagram application to take a picture

It does not have the same functions as your camera phone, such as scaling and other useful tools, such as the function of the iPhone camera grid. This will help you to make your photo better.
There are also other applications, such as VSCO Cam and Rookie, which offer advanced functions, including shutter control and white balance control. Camera +, an application for the iPhone, offers a stabilizer to combat, trembling hands and save sharp pictures, and also allows you to set the exposure of your camera.
If you have an iPhone, photographer Chris Ozer recommends deliberately underestimating your shots to resist the phone's tendency to blow out parts of the image. But if you shoot an all-encompassing situation with low light, Cortex Cam is a good application to try.
It is better to take the original picture with them, and then send them to Instagram.

Pay attention to the composition


Symmetric images are attractive, but most images are not absolutely symmetrical. Do not just automatically place the object in the middle, which can create an unclear image without a sense of energy or direction.
Instead, try the rule of thirds. This classic photography technique is a frame that is split evenly into three horizontal and vertical sections, with an object oriented along these imaginary lines, and this makes for a well-balanced frame. Just keep in mind that this guide, and not the rule - sometimes it's enough just to keep the object outside the center.
If you shoot a portrait that is not symmetrical, place the dominant eye of the object in the center. Steve McCurry, photographer, shot National Geograph

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