1, push the lens
It is a common shooting technique in shooting. It mainly uses the lens to move forward or zoom, and gradually approaches the object to be expressed, which makes people feel that they are approaching the thing to be observed step by step. Looking at things at close range can show the change of the same object from far to near, and can also show the change of one object to another.
Step 2 move the lens
Also known as moving photography, it is to fix the camera on a moving object and move the fixed object in all directions, so that the fixed object will have a moving effect. When shooting, the shooting picture will gradually appear, forming a visual feeling of patrol or display.
Step 3 follow the camera
Also called following, find the point of interest in the shooting process, and then shoot with the target. For example, in a hotel, only the big scene of the whole hotel is filmed at first, and then a waiter follows the camera from one position and walks around the table.
The position of the object to be represented by the subsequent lens in the picture remains unchanged, but it changes with the picture it passes through. Just like one person and another person walking in the street, things around them are changing, but the style of following itself has not changed. Follow-up lens is also a common method in film and television shooting, which can highlight the subject well, express the speed, direction, posture and other information of the subject, and give people an immersive feeling.
Step 4 shake the lens
Also known as panning, the camera does not move when shooting at the scene, but only shakes the lens to move left and right, up and down, move or rotate, making people feel that they are looking from one part of the object to another. For example, a person standing still and twisting his neck to see things, which is what we often say, is actually the truth.
Step 5 rotate the lens
Refers to the picture in which the subject is rotating. The lens rotates along the lens optical axis or at an angle close to the lens optical axis, and the camera rotates rapidly over 360 degrees. This kind of shooting technique mostly shows the vertigo of characters, and it is a common shooting technique in film and television shooting.