Above
Below
Low angles are captured from a camera placed below the actor’s eyes, looking up at them. Low angles make characters look dominant, aggressive, or ominous.
Straight
An eyelevel angle is the one in which the camera is placed at the subject’s height, so if the actor is looking at the lens, he wouldn’t have to look up or down. Eyelevel shots are incredibly common because they are neutral. They often have no dramatic power whatsoever, thus they are ideal for romantic comedies and news casting.
Tilted
Also called canted angle, a Dutch tilt has the camera leaning sideways, transforming the horizon into a slope. A Dutch tilt changes horizontal and vertical lines into diagonals and creates a more dynamic composition. Though rare, canted angles can be employed with great artistic effect to disorient and disturb the viewer.
Photographer used the below angle to created this picture. He set the camera below so he got a picture that show the top site of the trees. This angle shows the picture bigger and taller than real tree and he got the sky background because he set a camera lower.
Photographer uesd the above angle to created this photo by setting the camera above the head of little boy. He got a photo of these boy that looks bigger head and longer arms than his real. He can get all body of this little boy by taking a picture from the top.
This is my favorite photo. I used the above angle to created this picture. I set the camera above the tree and I got this picture, which covers the tree and the ground that have many leaf.
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