2. Rule of Thirds Within a camera’s frame, the image is divided into two equally spaced horizontal and vertical lines creating 9 parts. Important elements should be placed along these lines.
3. Establishing Shot This shot shows the subject in the environment; the viewer is able to see the full image of the subject with ample surrounding.
4. Extreme Long Shot These can be up to ¼ km long and is used to set the scene. It usually shows an outside of a building or a landscape.
5. Long Shot This shot shows the subject in its entirety from head to toe. The head is near the top of the frame and the feet near the bottom.
6. Medium Shot This contains the subject from the waist or knee level up to the head, it is mainly used in dialogue.
7. Chest Shot The setting in the background is still visible, the lower frame line cuts through the subject leaving just their chest and head.
8. Close Up These shots are very intimate shots. They magnify the subject and emphasize either the subject or object that is deemed important.
9. Extreme Close-Up These are just a more extreme version of the close up which magnifies the image further, almost to the point which is surreal to the human eye.
10. Over the Shoulder This shot shows what the subject or main person is looking at or interacting with. It is usually followed immediately by the reverse angle showing the main person looking.
11. Two Shot This shot show cases two people in the same scene and their interaction with each other.
12. Point of View This is a first person shot that shows the view from the subject’s perspective.
13. Bird’s Eye View This shot shows a scene from directly above. It is an aerial view looking down on the scene.
14. Eye Level This shot is positioned where the subject’s eyes are directly level with the camera.
15. High Angle Level The camera in this shot is elevated above the subjects head to emphasize actions.
16. Low Angle Level This shot is very much the opposite of the high angle level shot, showing the action from an upward perspective rather than a downward one on the subject.
17. Oblique Shot This is when the camera is tilted. It shows an imbalance and is often thought to be unstable.