2. CAM Shots
• Establishing shot
• Wide shot
• Long Shot
• Mid/medium shot
• Close up shot
• Extreme close up shot
• POV (point of view)
• Over the shoulder shot
• Two Shot
• Overhead shot
3. Establishing shot
• The scene of Wembley stadium.
• Shows the audience a full view of
the scenery.
4. Wide shot
• This is a wide shot of my dinner table.
• Wide shots are used to give the
audience a large amount of information.
5. Long shot
• This is a long shot of my
back garden.
• Long shots are used to just
like wide shots to show the
audience a large amount of
information.
6. Mid/medium shot
• This is a medium shot of me.
• Mid/medium shots are used to
frame a character or subject of their
torso (mostly torso and head but
can be torso and legs).
7. Close up shot
• This is a close up of my black
Labrador calendar.
• Close up shots are used to
show detail of an object or a
person.
8. Extreme close up shot
• This is a shot of mine and my friends
eye.
• Extreme close up shots are used to
show a part of the body or face at an
extreme detail to the audience so that
they have access to more information
or detail about this character or
object.
9. POV (point of view)
• This is a shot of me on my phone.
• Point of view shots show the view from
the characters perspective.
• This also allows the audience to know
and be aware who the character is at
the time being.
10. Over the shoulder shot
• This shot is of me doing my media
work.
• Over the shoulder shots can
demonstrate people positions and
different hierarchies.
11. Two shot
•This is a shot of two scissors.
•Two shot I usually used to signify
or show a relationship between the
two characters/objects.
12. Overhead shot
•This is a overhead shot of my friend on
her phone.
•Overhead is like a birds eye view.
14. Low
•This is a picture was taken at a low
angle.
•An angle taken from a lower place
that looks up at the character or
subject. Often used to make the
character or subject appear more
dominant and powerful.
15. High
•This is a high shot angle of my friend.
•This is an angle taken from a higher place that
looks down at the character or subject of ten
use d to show that the character is vulnerable
or weak.
16. Canted/oblique
•This is a picture of my beach
in Portugal.
•Camera angle that makes
what is shot appear tilted.
This is also used to
disorientate the audience.
17. CAM movement
• Pan
• Tilt
• Track
• Zoom
• Reverse zoom
• Dolly
• (SCREEN GRABS OF ALL)
18. Pan
•These are screen grabs of our school garden.
•This gives us a panoramic view sometimes used to establish scene
that cant fit into one shot/frame.
19. Tilt
•These are screen grabs of my body.
•Tilt can be used to give a viewer more
information/view about settings, objects,
characters.
•Often used to reveal a whole outfit of a
character.
20. Track
•These are screen grabs of me playing football.
•“Track” is referred to rails in which a wheeled platform sits on in
order to carry out smooth movement.
21. Zoom
•These are screen grabs of zooming into the pens.
•Zoom is when the camera feature goes in towards an
object or character to reveal more significant or detail.
22. Reverse zoom
•Exact opposite of zoom
•These are screen grabs of reverse zooming of the
pens
•When the camera feature zoo, goes out away from
an object or character to reveal more details/setting
around them.
23. Dolly
•These screen grabs are of the
camera circulating around me (dolly)
•When a camera moves in and out or
backwards and forwards on an object
called a dolly which is like a tripod
with wheels.
25. Symmetry balance
•This image is of my feet which are
symmetrical.
•When the shot or frame is equally
symmetrical or balanced on both sides.
•Often used to show order.
26. Asymmetry balance
•The exact opposite of symmetry.
•This is an image of our school
benches. Here the bins and trees are
not symmetrical.
•Often used in film to show disorder,
chaos or various objects.
27. Rule of thirds
•This image is of Wembley
stadium and it is a 3 by 3 image.
•The rule states that the image
needs to be divided in 9 equal
parts by two equally spaced
horizontal lines and two equally
spaced vertical lines.
28. Shallow focus
•This image the focus is on the ipad cover.
•Shallow focus is a photographic and
cinematographic technique incorporating
a small depth of field.
29. Deep focus
•The opposite of shallow focus.
•This image is of my beach in
Portugal here the image is all in
focus.
•The entire image is in focus. (the
foreground, middle-ground and
background are all in focus).
30. Focus pulls
•These are screen grabs of a
focus pull on my hand.
•Focus pull is a creative
technique in which you change
focus during shot. Usually this
means adjusting the focus
from one subject to another.
•Therefore in this case it would
be from my hand to the chair.