Framed Ink
Framed Ink
Framed Ink
HANDBOOK
TABLE OF CONTENT
04
QUESTIONS
05
BASIC SHOTS
10LENS
11
COMPOSITING
08 09
10 11
12 13
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Questions
1. What are trying to say in our narration as a whole?
2. What mood do we want our audience to be in?
3. What is the function of this moment within th story?
4. How are we going to take our audience there?
5. How is our drawing contributing to the general statement?
6. What can we leave out without changing what we are trying to say?
Not telling the audience things but rather make them feel things.
Give the audience answers while simultaneously nearly raising new questions.
Athmosphere
Expression, energy and mood.
Lighting
By changing the lighting, we can change the reality in front of us.
Making things lighter or darker, showing more or less, being more obvious or
ambigious will results in different world.
Selective vision
We priorities what we see based in our need at the moment, making specific
things stand out above the rest. What we require at the moment.
Let’s frame and illuminate things in order to show what we need to show,
how we need to show it and as much as we can. Lets crop out the rest.
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Basic check list
Medium shot:
Offers a wide view but crop out elements that interfere with the message.
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Close up:
Provide a better feel for the feature and reaction of a character to a situation.
At this point the reaction will be more important to the audience than
whatever caused it.
Rules of thirds:
Positioning our main elements on any of these axes or on their resulting
intersction will helps us get an interesting and well balanced image.
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Staying on the same side of the line:
lighting
Helps us focus the audiences’s attention on very specific and limited areas by
contrating contrast.
Lines
Curved shapes will always appear to be more stubtle and peaceful, diagonals
being on the other end more dynamic and aggressive. Straight lines will
represent assertiveness while curves will be kinder and easier on the eye.
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Avoid tangencies and wierd coincidences
Size difference:
Creating an uneven balance of shapes and masses in a frame ( big, small,
medium) automatically makes an image deeper, more dynamic and
interesting.
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Perspective:
We have the tendency to look toward where the vanishing point is since,
especially in the case of architectural environments, all lines parallel to the
horizon and among themselves, will be painting at it. Creating an obvious
center of interest.
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Lens
Wide angle:
50mm:
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long lens:
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Depict the dynamic of the image in terms of line. V
1
p
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Visual message within a still composition
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3. The person who is lit might have more positive intension than the one who
is not.
4. When the character is lit in a way that offers a bigger contrast than the oth-
er, our eye will go straight to that person - giving him a bigger visual
relevance.
W
e
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Establishing shots
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Looking down, feeling down. U
Overpowering shots
The moment we position the camera lower than the character’s eyes, the
subject becomes a towering imposing figure, apparently more in control of
the situation.
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Using the negative space
Negative space is in fact the surface that is supposed to be the least relevant in
an image, that is the space outside and between the elements that are
considered to be the main focus and subject of the composition.
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Order vs Chaos C
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Complex vs Simple
Stories are mostly defined by the characters frame one state to another, this
being the emotional, physical or on a level of enlightment. All this richness of
textures, states and different levels of depth will need their own visual
representation throughout the story - playing the contrast between simplicity
and complexity.
A.The detail and luxury of the dresses clash with the rest of the scene.
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Big vs Small A
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Angular vs Curved
Our choice of framing can be made based on what type of line we want to
favor (horizontals, verticals, diagonals, etc...)
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Tree vs forest effect - “A matter of numbers” B
Casting proper shadows in the frame that will reveal just enough information, T
so that the audience instantly gets and undertands what is there beyond the a
obvious. r
In a way be doing this, we will also have audience imagining very complex
structures - enhancing a feeling of uncertainty that will add to the mystery of
the moment.
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Big, medium and small
This will make the image looke more alive and with a bigger sense of depth
and implied perspective that will help make it all the more credible
representation of reality.
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Landscape as the character
Landscapes do have their own voice and speak just like any other character in
a film.
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(P.o.v) Point of view
It is a device that lets us put the audience in the movie in the most direct
physical way.
In doing so, we will see things the way the character perceives reality around
him.
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Keeping the focal point
It will be an essential task not only to direct the eye on the screen’s surface in
every single shot - but also to make sure the eye does not get lost whenever
we move to the next frame.
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Day time/ Night time S
There are two things to take into account when depicting day time, light B
source and the way the light source relfects on the elements in the scene. h
c
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Scale progression
By establishing a physical point of contact between the aliens and the ship’s
huge opening where they are being pulled back inside, we reinforce the scale
comparison between the two very clearly given the overlapping area.
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Knowledge vs Unawareness B
Emotional effects are also achieved by how the images interact with each 1
other on the screen. By manipilating the contrast between two different c
levels of tensions. T
s
1. Cops storming/ planning a landing. t
2. Crook totally oblivious to the situation. t
2
n
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Beyond the standard points of interest
1.The use of wide angle lense forcingh the perspective, the amount of shells
chaotically falling on the floor - explain the electrical tension.
There is value in not going for the obvious, for the actual center of the
subject matter, but for what is around it instead of the action itself. REactions
to the main action can on many occasions, be a more subtle and powerful way
to explain a situation or number of circumstances.
2. Consider depicting an encounter between a spy and his contact who have
never seen each other before. Beforehand they agree on a specific signal or
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distinctive piece of clothing or item and to exclude faces, expressions,
architecture or other surronding elements in the frame that might just get in
the way of understanding that as an audience now we are this spy looking for
that markerm adding ti the tension of the moment by fully identifying with
him. This also allow us to focus more on the contrast between the impatience
of the waiting one versus the calm of the other.
Action shots
Action shots are mostly defined by dynamic shape and compositions based
on diagonals. Diagonals and tiltled camera angles are associated in our minds
with a sense of instability of something going wrong and therefore alarm.
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