Eye-catching images to capture the viewer’s attention
Images can enhance a layout, making it superb, or ruin it, making it look flat and dull. And everybody wants a superb design. Of course, me too.
At a certain point, after a brief photography subject at university, I fell in love with light and how it was captured in photography. Sometimes to improve the content I design, and sometimes to fill the need to create an original image of a concrete topic, I use photography as a resource to visualize appealingly a message to spread.
People are the driving force of life and we have always been fascinated by our representation. For this, photography is a great tool to portray ourselves. Whether to announce a talk, to represent a topic, or to update our profile picture on social media, I have shot many people making them look great.
Our eyesight serves as a tool to bring us closer to what we like and away from what we don’t like. When we communicate, we can deal with a subject that is important to the reader, but if the images that accompany it are attractive, it is possible that their attention may go down if the content is dense or if they are not as interested as they thought they would be. Accompanying a text with images that invite them to stay, always brings us closer to success when we publish content.
Doing things is great, but if you don’t count them, they don’t exist. Generating images of events, acts or actions helps to document these moments to make them visible later, allowing you to go back to them and highlight what happened.
Photography is nothing more than capturing a specific moment in history. When it comes to shooting, achieving one result or another implies a greater or lesser effort of previous work to generate the desired image. By means of photo editing, and always seeking naturalness, we can avoid hours of work and costs prior to capturing the image.