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Landscape Composition and Stories of Place | ITIAN Photography Academy

ITIAN Photography Academy

Technology Simplified — Solutions That Work

Module 6 • Lesson 6.2 • Landscape & Place

Landscape Composition and Stories of Place

Move beyond the single scenic view. Use viewpoint, layers, scale, changing light, meaningful detail and honest sequencing to show what a place looks like, how it feels and why it matters.

100–140 minutesSpecialisationFive-image location projectComposition & storytelling

Learning Outcomes

By the end of Lesson 6.2, you should be able to:

Build depth and scale

Use overlap, size change, layers, atmospheric perspective and known-size references without placing people or equipment at risk.

Respond to light and weather

Use direction, contrast, colour, shadow, haze, water and sky as story elements while keeping the Lesson 6.1 stop conditions.

Begin with Meaning, Not Equipment

A technically impressive landscape can still feel generic. Specific observation turns scenery into a story of place.

Name the subject precisely

Is the subject the harbour, a working landscape, weather over a ridge, erosion, a pathway, a relationship between people and land, or a small ecological detail? Name it before framing.

Write the story sentence

Complete: “This sequence shows…” Keep it observable and specific. The sentence guides what belongs in the final five photographs.

Observe before photographing

Walk only through permitted safe areas. Notice direction of light, movement, repeated forms, sounds, work, traces of change, and the relationships between foreground, middle distance and background.

Separate fact from interpretation

A caption may state a verified place name or activity. Mood and personal response can be described as interpretation, but do not present assumptions as history, culture or fact.

Viewpoint: The First Composition Tool

Before changing lenses or settings, change your relationship to the scene. Small movements can separate overlapping objects, clean the horizon and alter the meaning of the frame.

Scan the edges

Check every corner for clipped objects, bright distractions, branches, signs, people or mergers. Decide whether each edge feels intentional.

Change height

A lower viewpoint can strengthen foreground and scale; a higher one can reveal pattern and separation. Remain on stable, permitted ground.

Move sideways

A small lateral change often removes a merger, opens a layer, aligns a reflection or changes the relationship between landforms.

Foreground, Layers and Scale

Depth comes from relationships, not simply from using a wide-angle lens.

Foreground with a job

Use a path, rock, plant, texture, shadow or water edge to establish place, invite entry, reveal scale or balance the frame. Remove it when it competes with the subject.

Middle-distance anchor

Give the viewer somewhere to pause: a tree, building, figure, bend, boat, landform or patch of light. Separate it through position, tone, colour or timing.

Background context

Mountains, sky, weather, settlement or distant water can complete the setting. Decide how much space the context deserves rather than filling the frame automatically.

Scale without danger

Use a person only with agreement and from a safe position. Buildings, trees, fences, tracks and boats can also provide size clues without staging risk.

Atmospheric depth

Haze, rain and reduced distant contrast can separate layers. Preserve the atmosphere instead of forcing identical contrast across every distance.

Compression and expansion

A longer focal length can visually compress distant layers; a wider view can exaggerate near-to-far relationships. Choose according to the story, not a landscape rule.

Light, Water, Weather and Sky

Backlight and atmosphere

Backlight can illuminate mist, spray, leaves or cloud edges. Shield the lens when safe, inspect flare and protect highlight detail that matters.

Overcast and quiet colour

Soft light can reveal saturated colour, subtle texture and detail without harsh shadow. It suits intimate landscapes and reflective stories.

Dramatic sky

Give the sky more space only when it advances the story. Check that the land still provides orientation, scale or meaning.

Changing weather

Photograph from within the approved field plan. The moment conditions reach a stop point, the session ends even if the visual drama is increasing.

Technical Decisions That Support the Story

Choose the required depth

Focus where the main subject and important layers need clarity. A smaller aperture can increase depth, but diffraction, movement and slower shutter speed still matter. Review at useful magnification.

Control movement deliberately

Decide whether leaves, water, cloud or people should be sharp, blurred or allowed to vary. Adjust shutter speed and support accordingly.

Protect important highlights

Use the histogram or highlight warning when available. If brightness exceeds one exposure, consider a carefully made bracket only when the scene and camera remain still enough.

Use support responsibly

A tripod can refine framing and consistency, but it must not obstruct a path, become unstable in wind or encourage a dangerous position. Hand-held work may be the safer choice.

The Five-Image Place Sequence

The sequence should expand understanding. Five nearly identical wide views do not create five chapters.

1

Establish

Orient the viewer with the wider setting, major relationships or defining condition.

2

Character

Show the form, texture, light, work, weather or feature that gives the place identity.

3

Relationship

Connect land, water, weather, people, structures, ecology or change without inventing cause.

4

Detail

Move visually closer to a meaningful trace, pattern, object or small environmental clue.

5

Close

End with reflection, transition, departure, quiet detail or a view that leaves the story open.

Interactive Five-Image Sequence Planner

Choose the strongest observable idea and visual condition. The planner creates a field brief, not a requirement to enter unsafe or restricted ground.

Choose your options, add brief notes, then select Build Sequence.

Captions, Context and Honest Editing

Identify

Use a verified place name or an appropriately general description. Do not guess spelling, ownership, cultural meaning or historical detail.

Protect

Generalise or withhold precise coordinates for fragile environments, sacred places, vulnerable wildlife, private property and locations where disclosure may cause harm.

Practical Project: One Place, Five Roles

Complete the field plan from Lesson 6.1, then create and edit a coherent five-image study of one accessible local place.

Prepare and confirm

Update access, conditions, turnaround time and communication. Write the one-sentence story and identify what evidence would support it.

Create the broad study

Photograph safe variations in viewpoint, height, focal length, foreground, layers, scale, light and detail. Include alternatives rather than perfecting only one composition.

Make the five visual roles

Create establish, character, relationship, detail and closing candidates. Do not force a role when it requires unsafe access or a misleading frame.

Review the contact sheet

Mark repetition, technical failures, edge problems, unclear subjects and missing roles. Select for meaning and sequence, not only individual drama.

Edit consistently

Use a coherent tonal and colour approach while respecting the real conditions. Keep the sequence visually connected without making every frame identical.

Caption and reflect

Add accurate captions, record permissions or location sensitivity, and explain one composition decision, one safety decision and one editing decision.

Future visual demonstrations

  • One scene from four viewpoints
  • Foreground with and without a visual job
  • Wide-angle versus compressed layers
  • Water at different shutter speeds
  • Panorama sweep and overlap
  • Five-role contact-sheet edit

The written lesson, planner and practical project are complete without video.

Lesson 6.2 Completion Checklist

0 of 10 lesson checks completed.

Module 6 Complete

You have combined field planning, responsible location practice, landscape composition and visual storytelling. Review your evidence folder, then return to the Photography Academy learning path for the next module.

ITIAN Photography Academy

Module 6 — Landscape and Place

Observe carefully, work safely and tell the story with respect.