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  • Close up shot
  • Establishing shot
  • Dutch Angle shot
  • In movies as well as on television, a close-up shot is a specific type camera shot that provides a scene deeper emotion. It strongly focuses on an actor's face, giving their expression the dominant subject of the shot. The photographer captures a close-up shot usingjust a long lens from a small distance.
  • High angle shot
  • Usually, establishing shots of landmarks or landscapes are broad or exceptionally wide. These shots may feature signage, monuments, or other obvious indication of time and location.
  • Low angle shot
  • The Dutch perspective relates to a photograph within which the camera has indeed been spun around the lens's axis and within reference to the photograph's backdrop or vertical lines. The primary function of a Dutch angle is to have the observer feel anxious or confused.
  • Ground level shot
  • A high camera angle is a film technique by which the cameraman stares down upward from at the subject. When we look at others or an object from a higher point, the subject appears smaller.
  • A low camera angle is one in which subject is taken when the camera is placed below eye level, near to the ground, and directed upwards. These pictures were taken from a different perspective, which pulls forth interesting details in the landscape. Your subject may appear closer, wider, longer, and greater through low-angle photography.
  • A floor level shot is one where your lens is aligned with the target. The camera angle is often used to depict a subject traveling without revealing their face, but it could also assist to connect the viewers and use the actor's performance to create a concept.
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