4 Proven Tips for Beautiful Blue Sky Photos (VIDEO)
Everyone loves sunny, cloudless days with bright blue skies when travelling or spending a day at the beach. But when it comes to creating compelling landscape photographs, well, not so much.
This tutorial from photographer Andrew Banner explains four super simple tips for making stunning landscape photos when the blue sky you confront is plain and featureless with nary a cloud in sight.
Banner is a passionate British pro who shares behind-the-scenes lessons after exploring the hills and dales near his home in the picturesque Norfolk Broads and further afield. He introduces today’s eight-minute episode like this: “Blue skies are rarely a photographer’s dream because they’re so stark, and you often get unpleasing direct sunlight that doesn’t make for great images.”
One easy way to handle this challenge is to “consider shooting for black-and-white processing because there’s an awful lot more you can do with it in black and white” And the simpler the sky the better your results will be when taking this approach.
Banner illustrates his second tip with an attractive shot of a yacht under sail with dark blue water in the foreground and a vivid blue sky overhead. In this case the shot looks pretty great as is because of Banner’s thoughtful composition skills.
As he explains, “It works quite well because we’re effectively joining the lower area of the water with the middle area of the waves, the sky itself, and the white sail and mast in the middle of the frame.” In essence, the shot is captivating because you’re respecting and accentuating the boundaries of these key elements to create a compelling graphic look.
At this point we’ve reached the midpoint of Banner’ interesting tutorial, with two more tipis on the docket that are just as simple and effective as those mentioned above. So watch until the end and then sail over to Banner’s instructional YouTube channel where there’s much more to learn.
And on a similar note, don’t miss the recent tutorial we featured with one of our favorite post-processing instructors who demonstrates how to rehabilitate drab, boring landscape photographs by adding natural-looking lights rays in Lightroom.