January 4: Change Your View (Photography Challenge)

I so totally did this when my eldest was a baby. I wanted to see what the world looked like from the pram/play nest etc. I wonder if I got as far as scrapping those photos.

Update:
no I didn't scrap them, but I can't find the photos - looks like hubby culled them. He has a habit of deleting my photos when he goes through his own ones removing the ones he thinks are rubbish photos or when there are too many of the same shot. He takes so many, I can understand why he culls his photos, but I wish he'd check with me before deleting mine.
Oh no!!! My hubby would not be my hubby anymore if he ever did that!! :giggle...although he knows better than touch my photos!!
 
Here is my page! I used the "Framing in Composition". I took this of my daughter for her Senior photos and love the light and how the branches frame her. I did not like the hard edge of the photo and the paper when I just scrapped the page. I tried to soften it by adding a texture. If anyone has another idea, let me know!

https://the-lilypad.com/forum/galleries/day4_nimmo.326646/

I don't want to hijack this challenge, so feel free to start a thread in the scrapping pad if you'd like to ask for suggestions. I think it's a lovely page as is, but understand if you'd like to try something different. I've got some ideas that might help.
 
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I used a birds eye view in this photo.
 
I used the "frame your subject" option - I was in our bathroom getting ready one morning and noticed Roxy's reflection in our full length mirror. I love this photo, and even though it wasn't the one I had planned to use, as soon as I saw it I knew it was "the one"

 
Here is mine:



Photos of the St. Mark's Clocktower in Venice taken from different points of view:
2. Worm's Eye View: Shot from below the subject, this viewpoint makes the viewer feels as though the subject is in control of the situation. Looking up at a subject instinctively makes us feel small.
3. Bird's Eye View: Shot from above, this viewpoint allows the viewer to feel superior to the subject or conveys a sense of protectiveness of the subject.
 
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