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How to compress perspective in landscape images

We show you how to give the effect of compressing the perspective and bring distant hills closer together by shooting a misty scene with a telephoto lens.

How to compress perspective in landscape images

Distant landscapes can be difficult to shoot. We’re all often tempted to use as wide a lens as possible in order to capture a vast view that looks great to the naked eye, but in a photograph that impressive vista can become a tiny sliver of interesting land with a mass of dull foreground below and plain skies above. In this tutorial we’re shooting landscapes with a telephoto lens in order to compress the scene.

This technique may not fit in as much of the land at either side of the frame as using a wide-angle lens would, but it will scale distant features to be more comparable, compressing hills and valleys together, while mist and haze can help to make edges in the landscape look more defined.

Mist gathered in the valleys in between the hills will also help to emphasise the structure of the landscape.

This effect is really popular with travel photographers as it enables them to include multiple landmarks within a single frame – shots of places like Bagan in Myanmar, with temple peaks compressed together in a sea of mist, are so familiar they’re almost a cliché.

You can also use the same technique in cities, compressing skyscrapers and spires, so long as you can find 
a suitable vantage point.

We used a 70-200mm f/2.8 Nikon lens fully zoomed in for our shot, although any telephoto lens should work. It’s the focal length of the lens, and your distance from the hills, that creates the compression effect. The longer the focal length, the more pronounced the effect.

How to compress perspective in landscape images: step 1

1 Get up early
Check the forecast to try to predict when fog is most likely. Keep an eye out for clear skies, cold nights, temperature changes and high humidity. First thing in the morning is usually the best time for fog. Head out well before sunrise so you can get set up with time to spare.

 

How to compress perspective in landscape images: step 2

2 Head up high
Find the right angle for viewing the landscape. Ideally you want to be looking out over rolling hills, and positioned slightly higher than the tops of the hills you’re photographing. We got set up below Corn Du in South Wales to shoot out across the misty lowlands below.

 

How to compress perspective in landscape images: step 3

3 Scale to fit
Use a long lens to crop in on your chosen subject. This will compress the hills and valleys, making them look more compact, and scale the entire scene to a similar size, rather than having, say, one small peak in the distance with a large tree in the foreground.

 

How to compress perspective in landscape images: step 4

4 Compose with care
You don’t want to overpower the sky with bright sunlight. To keep the fog clearly visible but gain the orange glow of sunrise, compose your image so that the sun is just outside the edge of the frame, and the light leaks in without the sun itself blowing out the highlights.

 

How to compress perspective in landscape images: step 5

5 Set spot metering
Put your camera in aperture-priority mode, and use an aperture of f/11 or f/16 to ensure you have a large depth of field. With spot metering selected, expose for the mist. Allow the land to become silhouetted if you have to, as all you really require are the shapes of the hills.

 

How to compress perspective in landscape images: step 6

6 Adjust the exposure
Review the histogram to check that the graph has a peak towards the right-hand side for very bright, white mist, or towards the middle for grey mist (above). If the graph is in the wrong place, or ‘clipped’ at either end, use exposure compensation to shift it left (-1EV) or right (+1EV).

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