Yes. I think I'd concentrate on composition if I were you.
Are you asking what is composition? If so, perhaps you can study some images from a few pros to see examples of good composition, and look on "My space" to see examples of mostly poor composition. Review the chapter in your text book as well.
Here is a real hint, though. Disposable cameras are about f/11 at 1/100th, so make sure you have plenty of light available. If you're composing a landscape, don't shoot too close to dusk or it will be too dark to see your composition technique. Let us know how the assignment goes.
2007-12-13 13:36:08
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answer #1
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answered by Ara57 7
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Look up rule of thirds, before you hit the shutter ask is this boring? Is it the same angle everyone else uses? If you get two yes answers don't bother pressing the shutter move on to a less used angle etc.
2007-12-13 14:09:37
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answer #2
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answered by Jeffy 3
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get low, or get high.
That is, change the perspective so that you have the camera much lower then normal eye-level, or much higher. This will make the picture much more interesting.
2007-12-13 12:24:35
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answer #3
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answered by Eric B 4
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Check google for "rule of thirds".
2007-12-13 13:44:19
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answer #4
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answered by Kahless 7
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Yes.
Do your own homework.
2007-12-13 13:07:18
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answer #5
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answered by photoguy_ryan 6
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