Honeymoon Kodaikanal packages hotels travel tips

Luxury Hotels

Valley View Inn
Hotel Kodai International
The Carlton
Hotel Mount View
The Dalethorpe Holiday Home
The Carnival Resort
The Summer Migration Hotel

Budget Hotels

Hotel Bala Kodaikanal
Kodai Resort Hotel
Hotel Gurupriya
Hotel R J Inn
Snooze-Inn
Hotel Hilltop Towers
Hotel Jai
J's Heritage
R R Residency
Hotel Sivapriya
Hotel Ganapathy Garden
Hotel Saliha International
Hotel Santosh
JC Residency
Goldan Parks Inn
Hotel Sunrise
Hotel SV International
Richwin Hotels
Green Mist Hotel
Hotel Spring Valley
JSR Residency
The Nest

Resorts

Villa Retreat
Quality Inn Sabari Resort
Hill Country Holiday Resort
Fairstay Holiday Resorts
Green Acres Resort
Kodai Valley view
Lilly's Valley
Green Roock Resorts
Homestays, Bungalows and Cottages
Rands homestay
Surya Holidays Inn
Villa Rose Home Stay
B's Hive
Amherst Cottage
Kodai Homestay
GreenLands Youth Hostel

 

 

HoneyMoon in Kodaikanal

Camera Tips and Tricks to have beautifull pictures for sweet memories

watch some videos for portrait photography for beginners

 

1. Alter Your Perspective

Most portraits are taken with the camera at (or around) the eye level of the subject. While this is good common sense – completely changing the angle that you shoot from can give your portrait a real WOW factor.
Get up high and shoot down on your subject or get as close to the ground as you can and shoot up. Either way you’ll be seeing your subject from an angle that is bound to create interest.

2. Play with Eye Contact

It is amazing how much the direction of your subject’s eyes can impact an image. Most portraits have the subject looking down the lens – something that can create a real sense of connection between a subject and those viewing the image. But there are a couple of other things to try:

A. Looking off camera – have your subject focus their attention on something unseen and outside the field of view of your camera. This can create a feeling of candidness and also create a little intrigue and interest as the viewer of the shot wonders what they are looking at. This intrigue is particularly drawn about when the subject is showing some kind of emotion (ie ‘what’s making them laugh?’ or ‘what is making them look surprised?’). Just be aware that when you have a subject looking out of frame that you can also draw the eye of the viewer of the shot to the edge of the image also – taking them away from the point of interest in your shot – the subject.

B. Looking within the frame – alternatively you could have your subject looking at something (or someone) within the frame. A child looking at a ball, a woman looking at her new baby, a man looking hungrily at a big plate of pasta…. When you give your subject something to look at that is inside the frame you create a second point of interest and a relationship between it and your primary subject. It also helps create ‘story’ within the image.

3.Experiment with Lighting
Another element of randomness that you can introduce to your portraits is the way that you light them. There are almost unlimited possibilities when it comes to using light in portraits.
Side-lighting can create mood, backlighting and silhouetting your subject to hide their features can be powerful.

 
 

Copyright Y HoneymooninKodaikanal.com