The essential concept in this project was camera composition. We were asked to define this concept in this project using photos we had personally taken. The photographs of camera composition that we shot were taken from narrative boards that we had already created. After finishing the image portion of the project, we uploaded the pictures onto a PowerPoint presentation that had been prepared and explained what was happening in each picture. We used action lines, genre, tone, and other elements to convey what was happening.
The visual interaction between components in a frame is known as camera composition. The task that required the most effort and teamwork was this one. We had to figure out how to effectively communicate what was going
The subsequent camera framing shots were intended to be represented by this photo slide. It is a list of every camera framing shot we discovered. This, in my opinion, was crucial information to acquire, both for the movie we have to produce and for assessing movies we see in general. The over-the-shoulder shot is displayed in this illustration from my Camerawork Storyboard slide. The Over The Shoulder view is a perspective that extends over the person's shoulder and typically focuses on the expression of a different conversational subject. Everyone is aware that a production cannot exist without a plot. In other words, the drafting of the story would be useless without a camera composition shot. This particular photo serves to visualize
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