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Fog Adds Fuzz On Photos To Make Them Look Fantastic

Art

Have you seen photographs with fogs? Maybe not completely. Fog makes images look fuzzy and dim, but still, they look beautiful. Just like sunsets and sunrises, fog is one phenomenon that can draw most art and photo-lovers. Photographs of mountains, forests, volcanic landscapes and oceans - all that looks beautiful and bright, with a dim, fuzzy appearance.

It is tough, eerie and rather scary to travel and navigate through mist-laden scenes, yet they are arresting and captivating for camerapersons. Foggy mornings make photographs look dreamy and lost. Like a cocoon around nature, with the imagination getting riotous, fog-filled photographs can look miraculous and magical. Such mystic moments can make photographers capture beauty in a wild and sensuous manner, according to Fubiz. 

Foggy photographs look good as they can capture the "gradient-obscuring effect" of mist. Any forest that has tall trees, winding roads and mountain peaks - all those roads that accentuate the viewer's sense of perspective - can get beautifully accentuated by fog, according to Picsart.

Fogs also love to snake through valleys, trails and forests. They just sit on their haunches and hang heavily. You also see it settling over lakes and ponds because the water is warmer than the cool air above it. Mists cannot resist the space above the water.

When you shoot a foggy scene, take care to position your camera carefully, so that you can capture moments accurately. By shooting photographs "aérien" or in close-up, you get the chance to your point of view and enrich your photograph through a natural phenomenon of the fog.

View the various colors that inform your photographs - pink, blue or green. Whenever a color informs the emotions of a photograph, you get a melange of snaps and shots. You can check out the collection of images that have been offered by Adobe Stock, which show the beauty and the brightness of such natural shots.

The best time to capture fog is in the early mornings or evenings. Be careful about the light settings. Capturing photographs on foggy days shows you that the colors have lower contrasts, and do not feel so saturated.