Camera angles

                       CAMERA ANGLES

Using the resource at the end, I was able to learn more about camera angles that are:

  • Low angle shot
The subject is framed from below their eye line in a low-angle manner. A low-angle shot of one character is frequently coupled with a high-angle picture of the other character to illustrate power dynamics between characters.
  • High angle shot
The camera, in a high-angle shot, is pointing down at your subject. It frequently makes you feel inferior to your subject as if you are “looking down” on them. However, as with any other camera angle, there are several applications.
  • OTS shot
Another angle that might change a viewer’s perception of a scene is an over-the-shoulder shot. For example, a close-up of another character’s face taken from “over the shoulder” of another character is used to show conflict or confrontation in an OTS shot.
  • Dutch tilt
The camera is inclined to one side for a (Dutch tilt). You can generate a sensation of disorientation, a destabilized mental state, or heighten tension by tilting the horizon lines in this fashion.
  • Overhead shot
An overhead shot is taken from above and looks down on your subject. These are usually filmed from 90 degrees above; anything less would be termed a low-angle shot.
  • Eye level
You can achieve a neutral perspective by shooting at eye level (not superior or inferior). This is similar to how we view people in real life, with our eye lines intersecting with theirs, and it has the potential to tear down barriers.
  • Shoulder level
A camera angle that is as high as your subject’s shoulders is known as a shoulder-level shot. Shoulder-level shots are more common than eye-level shots, which can make your performer appear shorter than he or she is.

To summarize the type of shots, i will be adding a detailed collage of the pictures.





 https://www.nfi.edu/camera-angles/

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