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- Headroom_(photographic_framing) abstract "In photography, headroom or head room is a concept of aesthetic composition that addresses the relative vertical position of the subject within the frame of the image. Headroom refers specifically to the distance between the top of the subject's head and the top of the frame, but the term is sometimes used instead of lead room, nose room or 'looking room' to include the sense of space on both sides of the image. The amount of headroom that is considered aesthetically pleasing is a dynamic quantity; it changes relative to how much of the frame is filled by the subject.One rule of thumb taken from classic portrait painting techniques, called the \"rule of thirds\", suggests that the subject's eyes, as a center of interest, are ideally positioned one-third of the way down from the top of the frame.REDIRECT Template:Unreliable source?This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed). This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name. For more information follow the category link.Moving images such as movie cameras and video cameras have the same headroom issues as still photography, but with the added factors of the movement of the subject, the movement of the camera, and the possibility of zooming in or out.Perceptual psychological studies have been carried out with experimenters using a white dot placed in various positions within a frame to demonstrate that observers attribute potential motion to a static object within a frame, relative to its position. The unmoving object is described as 'pulling' toward the center or toward an edge or corner. Proper headroom is achieved when the object is no longer seen to be slipping out of the frame—when its potential for motion is seen to be neutral in all directions.Headroom changes as the camera zooms in or out, and the camera must simultaneously tilt up or down to keep the center of interest approximately one-third of the way down from the top of the frame. The closer the subject, the less headroom needed. In extreme close-ups, the top of the head is out of the frame, but the concept of headroom still applies via the rule of thirds.In television broadcast camera work, the amount of headroom seen by the production crew is slightly greater than the amount seen by home viewers, whose frames are reduced in area by about 5%. To adjust for this, broadcast camera headroom is slightly expanded so that home viewers will see the correct amount of headroom. Professional video camera viewfinders and professional video monitors often include an overscan setting to compare between full screen resolution and \"domestic cut-off\" as an aid to achieving good headroom and lead room.One of the most common mistakes that casual camera users make is to have too much headroom: too much space above the subject's head.".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageExternalLink books?id=NgGLlL6oTkoC&pg=PA80.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageID "23381809".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageLength "5487".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageRevisionID "644437796".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Adrian_Legg.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Broadcasting.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Broadcast_engineering.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Composition_in_visual_art.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Photographic_techniques.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Close-up.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Composition_(visual_arts).
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Display_device.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Framing_(visual_arts).
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Highlight_headroom.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Lead_room.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Movie_camera.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Overscan.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Portrait_painting.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Rule_of_thirds.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Television_program.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Video_camera.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Viewfinder.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLink Zooming_(filmmaking).
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Headroom (photographic framing)".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:By_whom.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fact.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Opinion.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:POV-statement.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Photography.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Verify_credibility.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) subject Category:Broadcast_engineering.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) subject Category:Composition_in_visual_art.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) subject Category:Photographic_techniques.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) hypernym Concept.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) type Discipline.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) type Technique.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) comment "In photography, headroom or head room is a concept of aesthetic composition that addresses the relative vertical position of the subject within the frame of the image. Headroom refers specifically to the distance between the top of the subject's head and the top of the frame, but the term is sometimes used instead of lead room, nose room or 'looking room' to include the sense of space on both sides of the image.".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) label "Headroom (photographic framing)".
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) sameAs Q5689933.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) sameAs m.06w44j_.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) sameAs Q5689933.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) wasDerivedFrom Headroom_(photographic_framing)?oldid=644437796.
- Headroom_(photographic_framing) isPrimaryTopicOf Headroom_(photographic_framing).