Photo Guidelines
Here are some thoughts to keep in mind when taking
photographs for the Beacon.
1. Faces! I try
never to run photos of backs of heads. If that means
asking people to pose for a shot, that's fine.
2. Direct sunlight is
the casual photographer's enemy -- it creates bright
brights and dark darks, which look lousy in print. An
overcast day is best. Failing that, get your subjects
completely in shadow and try not to let any sunlit areas
appear in the background.
3. Action shots are
tough, even for professionals. Don't even try. Instead,
ask everyone to pose, look at the camera, and smile.
4. It's photos of
Andover people that we're looking for. A photo of
someone from a nearby town at an event in Andover is OK,
I guess, but I'll always be looking for one of an
Andover person instead.
5. Set your camera's
resolution so that at least one of the two numbers is
1,000 or higher. Less than that and the picture may be
too small to look good in the Beacon. More than that is
great.
6. Pictures from far
away don't work (ie photos of performers, athletes, etc
taken from the audience, the bleachers, etc.) Instead,
you need to fill the frame with your subject. Don't
leave a lot of empty space on the left or right. Move
closer if you can. Zoom in if you can't move closer, but
try not to zoom all the way to the limit of the camera's
zoom ability. Get closer instead.
7. If you're shooting a
big group (like a sports team), don't let them spread
way out in a single row. Try for a "squarer" shot by
bunching them up into three or even four rows. Keep
telling them to get closer together, so you can get
closer to them for the shot. That way their faces may
actually be recognizable in the Beacon.
8. It's not a bad idea
to set your flash so it always fires. If you're shooting
indoors or in shade, the extra light (even if the camera
doesn't think it needs it) will help make the photo look
better in print.
9. Please turn off the
automatic date stamp! If there's a date printed right on
the photo itself, I'll have to edit it out, and that's
usually difficult to impossible.
10. Get names (and the
correct spelling!) of everybody in the photo. And be
sure to tell me who took each photo -- don't assume I'll
know.11.
Don't take just one or two shots -- take many! That way
we can throw away the "oops" shots and keep just the
best.
12. Please don't
edit or otherwise tweak the photos before sending them
to us. We have our own pre-processing things we have to
do to each photo, and they'll turn out best if we're
working with the original shot.
13. E-mail is by far
the best way to send photos. Don't embed them in a Word
document! That makes them unuseable.