I offer plenty of advice to my guests when we are on safari especially at the beginning of the trip and when we are approaching something exciting. I often mention an ISO that I think will give a fast enough shutter speed, or I suggest a shutter speed itself. I also suggest over- and under-exposure adjustments if I think they are needed.
But I don’t often make suggestions about composition. This is intentional, since I love reviewing guests’ photos and seeing how differently they have all interpreted the same sightings and situations. I suppose that my decision of where to park the vehicle for each sighting dictates – to some extent – the composition that guests can employ. But I usually park a little further back to start with – which allows animals to settle in our presence – and this gives guests a chance to compose from further away, or zoom in with long lenses.
Occasionally, guests will ask me for some pointers on composition. The short answer is that if it is visually appealing, then take the shot! But of course, “visually appealing” means different things to different people. So I often run through several of the “accepted” composition techniques which are commonly used.
As I mentioned at the start, these composition ideas are only suggestions. I would encourage all photographers to trial your own methods and see what works. Don’t be put off by what others think and work to develop your own style. However, based on studies of how a viewer’s eye looks at an image, it is known that certain composition methods are pleasing to the human eyes and brain. But there may also be others that have not yet been discovered!
[I should add that for this blog post, I have found images of mine that conform to the guidelines that I am suggesting. This is not to say that all my images do, or that all of yours should too!]