10 Tips on Using a Wide Angle Lens

Universe of Energy in Epcot, Walt Disney World, Florida.  Taken with an Ultra Wide Angle Lens at 10mm.

Universe of Energy in Epcot, Walt Disney World, Florida. Taken with an Ultra Wide Angle Lens at 10mm.

Guest Blog article by Justin Miller.

Ultra-wide angle lenses, referred to as UWA, can offer a unique, sometimes challenging, often rewarding view of the world for photographers.  Many of us have faced that limitation where we can’t quite fit a whole subject into our frame – we’ve backed up as far as we could, but we’re stuck with a cropped subject or a stitched panorama to try to get the whole scene in.  A wide angle lens can give us those extra few feet on either side we need.  A UWA lens takes it in the other direction.  You can find yourself surprised, even shocked, at how wide the view is.  Instead of being backed up against a fence trying to squeeze everything into the shot, you keep inching closer and closer to your subject, thinking that you can’t get any closer without bumping into it, yet it’s all still comfortably in your frame.  In one way, it’s like a whole new kind of photography, and requires some rethinking and relearning to accommodate the unique perspective of the lens.

UWA lenses are generally those that provide a 35mm-equivalent focal length of 24mm or less.  On an APS-C crop-sensor camera, generally this would be 16mm or less.  There are two types of lenses in this focal range – rectilinear and fisheye.  For this article, I’m referring to rectilinear lenses, which renders straight lines without the curvature familiar to the fisheye look.

I am far from an expert on the subject, and experimentation and practice are strongly encouraged to discover the potential of such a lens in your hands, and with your vision.  My own experimentation’s have given me some ideas of how to get fun or interesting results from these lenses.  Hopefully, by sharing them with you, might spark your creative juices or give you a starting point if you’re new to UWA lenses.

Here are My 10 Favorite UWA Shooting Tips

1. Shoot level with the horizon –

Rectilinear UWAs are very good at keeping vertical and horizontal lines straight, but only when the camera is pointed straight ahead.  Any slight downward or upward angle can result in very distorted lines and strange perspectives.  Keeping the camera level with the horizon, and perpendicular, will provide nice, straight lines that require little or no correction in post processing.

2. Shoot un-level with the horizon –

Once you know how lines get distorted when not perpendicular and level, you can learn how to use it for desired effect.  Curved vertical lines can make structures look large or imposing, or small and distant; curved lines can create movement in a composition, and add visual interest and artistic style, or create forced perspectives and skewed scale.

3. Be cognizant of leading lines –

With UWAs, compositions can work out very nicely when you can get a nice long line or two to lead the eye from the corner of the frame into the shot, or out from the center, providing visual interest and walking the viewer’s eyes through a scene.  Watch for roof lines, curbs, branches, roadway edges, sidewalks, or any other objects that can be used for leading lines.

4. Stop down and get close –

UWAs are particularly effective in putting foreground objects right up close, and still show lots of background. You can put yourself right up on top of signs, statues, lights, etc so they fill a big chunk of the frame, and the UWA will still pull in a big sweeping background like buildings, trees, or landscapes. UWAs have a larger depth of field already, so stopping down the aperture will allow you to get it all in focus.  And UWAs are particularly sensitive to large expanses of nothing.  Foreground subjects fill in the dead space in the composition and provide greater depth and dimension to the scene.

5. Don’t put people in the corners –

If you want to keep people as your friends, watch that you don’t put them into the far right or left edges of a UWA shot. Because of the rectilinear design – UWAs are relatively straight throughout the middle of the frame, then drastically curve at the far ends. So things in the middle are appropriate proportions, but as you get near the ends, things stretch and get wider. It’s hardly noticeable with landscapes, buildings, etc – but with people, it’s VERY noticeable. And not too many people like to look wider and shorter than they are!

6. Watch out for invaders –

Because of the extremely wide perspective of UWA lenses, it’s very easy to inadvertently include something in the composition you didn’t intend.  You have to be very aware of the corners and ends of your shot when setting up, and give yourself a wide berth.  People you thought would be out of the frame can sometimes end up in a UWA shot, as can pets, your camera bag, your shadow, tripod legs, roof eaves, overhanging branches, etc.  A little extra vigilance can prevent unwanted invaders.

7. Get low –

UWA compositions can be particularly effective when they are shot from a low angle – you can include much of the ground in front of you to guide you up to the subject. With a garden as a foreground, or a fountain or small pond…you have an interesting subject to lead you back to the horizon, or you force perspective.  Because of the extreme width of a UWA lens, you can shoot from very low, close-to-the-ground angles and still fit tall subjects and skies into the frame.

8. Take advantage of big skies –

When the sky has clouds in it, UWAs really shine. Get close to your subject, fill 1/3 or 1/2 of the frame with it, and shooting with a nice sky backdrop, let those cloudy skies fill up the rest of the frame. Shooting upwards can work really well with these…the clouds take on a dimensionality, streaking out and around your subject dramatically.  And because of the curvature in the corners, clouds often seem to be in motion in your shots.

9. Don’t be afraid of the dark –

UWAs can be quite a lot of fun to shoot with at night.  When used on a tripod, they can give long-exposure night scenes a lot of pop with that great wide perspective and catch quite a bit of scenery, starry sky, or landscape to enhance your shot.  However, even though these lenses are rarely much faster than F2.8-4, the small focal length tends to lessen the affect of shake or movement, allowing these lenses to be hand-held at fairly long exposures compared to longer lenses.  That means dusk or evening hand-held shots, or wide interiors, are surprisingly possible even without stabilization or a tripod.

10. Go vertical –

UWA lenses can be particularly useful for portrait orientation shots – when dealing with very tall subjects, or wanting a feet-to-sky perspective.  For example, a 10mm lens in the vertical orientation will still be providing a horizontal field of view of around 77 degrees, roughly the same as a 24mm lens in landscape orientation.  In other words, an ultra-wide angle lens is still a wide angle lens vertically.

There are plenty of rectilinear UWA lenses to choose from, including models by most major manufacturers (Canon, Nikon, Olympus, Pentax & Sony all have at least one) as well as third party players Sigma, Tamron, and Tokina for most mounts.  They can be a lot of fun, open up new styles of photography, and help get the shot in tight spaces or large subjects.  Some of these tips may help, some you may already know…but most importantly, get out there and experiment!

Popular Wide Angles Lenses recommended by Scott Thomas Photography:

Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 AT-X116 Pro DX Wide Angle Zoom

Sigma 10-20mm f/3.5 EX DC HSM AF Zoom Lens

Posted in Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 44 Comments

Today’s Playground

Tracy on her blog, Milkay Photography – Project 365, recently did a Playground Series.  She photographed an old playground before it was to be demolished to make way for safer modern equipment.  The series captured the nostalgia of a bygone time when kids played for hours without worrying about today’s over protective environment.

Last weekend I was at Mercer Park in Baldwinsville, New York which has some swings which reminded me of the ones I played on in grade school.  Then I spotted the warning on the seat.  I am sure the swing manufacturer has a few lawyers on its payroll.  At least it is made in the USA. Hear the sarcasm?

Warning - Made in the USA

Warning - Made in the USA

Later in the day, I watched my niece’s son swinging as I remembered myself doing.  Without a worry in the world.  Just the simple joy of a swing.

The simple joy of a swing.

The simple joy of a swing.

Posted in People | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

View 125: Burnout!

Burnout!  A Chevy Camero spins its tires in an effort to warm them up for better traction.

Burnout! A Chevy Camero spins its tires in an effort to warm them up for better traction.

When approaching the staging area at ESTA Safety Park Dragstrip near Cicero, New York, most drag racers will perform a burnout − that is, apply water to the driven tires either by backing into a small puddle (the “bleach box” or “water box”) or having it sprayed on. The car then exits the water and does a burnout to heat the tires, making them even stickier.  The stickier the better for the all important launch down the 1/4 mile track.  The better the start, the better the time of the race and the better the chances of winning the race against the other competitor.  See, burnouts make everything better at the track.  Doing it on a public road will bring attention from your local law enforcement. 🙂

1968 Dodge Coronet R/T doing a long, smokey burnout heating up the rear tires to make them even stickier for the important start in the race.

1968 Dodge Coronet R/T doing a long, smokey burnout heating up the rear tires to make them even stickier for the important start in the race.

Posted in Sports, Weekly View | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

More on Creative Exposures

Running Track.

Runner taken at 1/40s, f/16, ISO 200, EV +0.3, 70mm Focal Length.

I was looking for an event to do movement photography like panning and blurs.  Found a high school Track and Field meet which would be prefect for such endeavors.  Not only that but the weather was perfect and the track oriented for great afternoon sunlight.  When everything comes together (weather, light and subjects) there is only one thing to do: shoot!

Local amateur events are great in that photographers can get close to the action.  I was able to get right next to the track to photograph all the running events.  Sprints, distance events, hurdles, and relay races.  I used my favorite lens for sports, the Nikon 70-200VR f/2.8.  My camera can only do 3 frames per second so I went old school and set it in single shot mode. As I do with all sporting events, I put my camera in Shutter Priority mode.

During the distance events I used a slow shutter speed and panned with the runners as they came by.  Panning takes lots of practice and many photos to get a few keepers.  As I mentioned in the assignment for this month on creative exposure, showing movement is one of the ways to add interest to your photographs.

Opposed to using a fast shutter speed to freeze the action and see everything sharply as I have done in the photo showing two runners jumping over the hurdles. Another important aspect of sports and action photography is timing.  You want to catch the action at its peak.  Not only was I able to do that here but I had a great race.  These two went right to the wire with the blue racer edging it out for the win.

Runners jumping over the hurdles.

Runners jumping over the hurdles taken at 1/1000s, f/4.5, ISO 200, EV 0, 200mm focal length.

Posted in Photography, Sports | Tagged , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Assignment 7: Creative Exposure

One of the first decisions a photographer makes before he takes a photograph is what exposure to use.  There is no wrong answer as long as the photo is not over or underexposed.  You can select a small aperture to keep everything in focus in the frame from front to back or shoot wide open with the large aperture for a selective focus photograph.  Maybe you want to show movement by using a slow shutter speed or freeze the action with a fast one. It is all up to how you want to create the photo.

For Assignment 7, I am looking for photographs where you use a creative exposure and explain why you decided on the exposure settings used. Here’s an article I highly recommend you read: Finding the Right Creative Exposure (if you click on the link you’ll see why I do. :)).  It will give you some more ideas about what a creative exposure is.

Those of you with Point & Shoot type of cameras, this would be a good time to review the different Scene selections which give creative exposures like Landscape, Sports, Night, Fireworks and others.

An example of a Creative Exposure: I choose a slower shutter speed of 1/15th of a second to blur the incoming metro train in Washington, D.C.

An example of a Creative Exposure: I choose a slower shutter speed of 1/15th of a second to blur the incoming metro train in Washington, D.C.

As in the other assignments, do not send me your photos. What I would like you to do is post them on your blog, flickr or other photo sharing site, personal website or any other place on the Internet where you can place a link to it here by making a comment to this blog entry. Then we can visit those sites and learn about making Creative Exposure photographs.

Please, have your photos posted on or before Midnight (your time), Wednesday, May 26, 2010. Don’t have a place to post? Might be a good time to start up a blog or join a photo community like flickr.  As I have done for all the Assignments, I’ll put together a recap with my comments.

If you have any questions, leave me a comment and I will be happy to answer them. By the way, I would really appreciate it if you would help spread the word about this assignment so we can get lots of people to participate. Thank you!

Click Here to Order Understanding Exposure by Bryan PetersonUnderstanding Exposure: How to Shoot Great Photographs

For my May photography book, I am re-reading one of the best all time books on photography.  Bryan Peterson’s Understanding Exposure which explains the exposure triangle of Aperture-Shutter Speed-ISO and how to correctly expose for many types of situations a photographer may encounter.  Throughout the book there are references to using exposure creativitly and makes a very good companion to this month’s assignment on Creative Exposure.  I do suggest if you read this book, to have your camera and its manual next to you.  It helped me tremendously as I would read a technique,  set my camera for the same technique and take a few sample photos to help me understand it.  This is a book I re-read once a year to remind myself of the basics of photography.  Without a good understanding of the basics, many new photographers will become frustrated.  I would not want that to happen to any of you!

Posted in Assignments | Tagged , , , , , , | 50 Comments