Top 10 Tips on How to Create the Perfect Christmas Photo Album
Author Jonathan Appleby, Copytrack.com 2017
Aren’t you just sick of photos forever remaining digital files. Step it up this year and turn Christmas into a project to create the perfect festive holiday album. We’re talking much more than an album with photos, we’re talking about a thought-out design and structure that really tells the story of your Christmas festivities. So, without further ado here is Copytrack’s gift – the top 10 tips to creating the perfect Christmas photo album.
Realise your motive
To kick things off, focus on why you are creating this album. It is for your family and that means it should be full of fun, love, personal memories and pictures that will crack smiles on faces for all the years to come. It’s Christmas – keep it upbeat and colourful.
Text or no text?
This is a big question. Do you want to fill the album with Christmas messages, your own personal thoughts, or just let the pictures do the talking? A happy medium is always captions. There is no wrong or right, and both have their advantages and disadvantages. Just consider this when you start creating the album.
Get up early and prepare
Christmas starts with the first slow yawns and sleepy steps. Make sure you’re around to capture all the moments that often are forgotten about. My brother once filmed my mum and dad in bed as they were waking up one Christmas morning, to this day these are my favourite few moments of footage. It’s about catching that real essence of Christmas, which goes far beyond bad Christmas jumpers and presents. On a more practical note, make sure the camera is fully charged, and check there is space on the camera. You don’t want to miss out any key moments while waiting for technicalities.
Keep on the move
Christmas day happens all over the house. Try and invade all the rooms and capture the full essence of Christmas day, it happens elsewhere than just the living room. There’s always chaos in the kitchen and those last-minute secret Christmas wrapping sessions upstairs. Be everywhere, camera to hand.
Keep it simple
Okay you want to make sure you capture everything, but don’t be annoying. Try and be subtle about your photographing. Nobody wants a camera happy Billy Eliot during the hassle of preparing for Christmas day. Also avoid camera setups and catch the authentic feel of the day. Use the natural lighting setup to your advantage. And try to avoid using a tripod, you want to be able to move around with ease and there is nothing graceful about trying to dissemble and resemble tripod constantly.
Range of shots and subjects
Capture the little things too. Get closeups of the decorations, a present, the little bits and bobs that help create that Christmas feeling. Not only can they add bold diverse colours into your photo album, but they’re a great way to break the collection up and add some diversity to it before it gets a bit samey. As for photographing the loved ones, don’t afraid to get right up close to their cherry cheeks and also snap them from a distance. And please, I beg, get an amazing photo of the Christmas tree.
Portrait time
Every Christmas photo album needs a group portrait. We’re not talking about a group picture, we’re talking about the real deal, 100 %, professional portrait. Here you will break a lot of the other rules previously mentioned. Use a tripod, getting the lighting equipment, really try and take professional portrait and not just a group photo. Warn family members and make sure everyone is ready. This image should also work as a great stand alone. Add a little spice to your group photos in a creative way to prevent it from just being a sea of smiling heads with popped bellies.
Selecting the final photos
Less is more. Be harsh with the photos you select. Have an equal representation of everyone, and watch the flow of the album, make sure there isn’t a cluster of photos of a certain time. You can always keep the other photos, but for this album be critical. If you have too many images you run the risk of the album becoming repetitive and boring.
Laying out your album
So, you’ve got all the images. Now you have to plan the layout. Don’t cram too much in, blank spaces relax a page. Chronological layouts from the morning to the last man standing are always a simple way to add narrative to your photo album. Perhaps use some simple designs on each page to add a running theme to the album – just don’t go too crazy – the pictures are always the main focus.
Don’t forget it’s Christmas
Okay, world-altering photo album aside, you have to remember it’s your Christmas too! So get in some shots and hand the camera about. It’s hard letting go of the camera, especially when Mum takes 20 painful minutes to learn how to make a snap, but it’s important that you are there too.
Copytrack’s Tip
Copytrack’s gift hopefully helps you create a perfect Christmas photo album. We know it’s hard creating projects especially within your own personal environment. But relax and enjoy the experience. It’s about just capturing the spirit of the day. Don’t get too serious. Despite Christmas being one the rare times we all actually get together, it can be stressful organising it all, so don’t add to the stress. Have fun, have a drink- a big Happy Christmas from Copytrack!
Jonathan Appleby, Oranienburger Straße 4, 10178 Berlin
[email protected]
About Copytrack:
Copytrack (www.copytrack.com) was founded in 2015 by Marcus Schmitt and currently employs around 25 people from legal, IT, customer service and finance. The service supports photographers, publishers, image agencies and e-commerce providers. It includes a risk-free search of the global Internet for image and graphics data uploaded by users at Copytrack are found with a hit accuracy of 98 per cent. The customers define if images are used without a license and even determine the amount of subsequent fees supported by an automatic license calculator on the portal. Copytrack is fully responsible for an out-of-court solution in over 140 countries as well as a legal solution in the areas relevant to copyright law. If the image has been successfully licensed, the rights holder receives up to 70 percent of the agreed sum. The pure search function is free of charge.
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