A Beginner’s Guide to Architecture Photography
Architecture images grace the pages of magazines and fill travel albums all over the world. If architects do their job right, it only fits that their work would catch the eye of creative photographers.
Whether you are a hobbyist strolling a new city, a travel blogger looking to share spectacular sights with your readers, or a professional photographer looking for a new niche, the architecture around us all the time is exciting and varied subject.
- Always Use a Tripod
- Composition for Building Photography
- Control Perspective
What is Architecture Photography?
The biggest mistake you can make in architecture photos is to snap and go, with little planning or forethought. Take your time and exercise your creative grey cells.
Mary Doe
Architecture is the design of buildings and living spaces; it’s an art to itself that many people enjoy and appreciate. To photograph buildings, you are taking pictures of someone else’s work. But in doing so, you capture how the building exists in the real world after it has been built, something that the architects only dream of.
Our planet’s wildlife faces urgent threats from all sides: climate change, deforestation, and animal-human conflict. Today’s wildlife photographers can help advocate for their protection, but they can also cause damage to the environment, intentionally or otherwise.
Camera Equipment for Architecture
If you follow the tips below, you will avoid many of the most common mistakes while taking architecture photos. The biggest things to keep in mind are avoiding getting bogged down in technicalities and instead worry more about the basics of good photography like composition, lighting, and creating a connection with the viewer.
When choosing lenses, think about the distortion that some of your lenses will cause and work to avoid it. Finally, be sure to spend some time considering how you want to present the building by thinking about the best time of day for the best light.