Not true.
i'm an artist, you can trust my input.
working with photography, you can take a picture of anything. right? my point comes to this, subject doesn't matter. for example, lets say i go out and take a picture of a trash can. trash cans are not that pleasing to the eye. you can take some ordinary photo of that single trash can. what matters is the angles. don't overthink it. you have to let creativity flow in order to get an interesting result. get low to the ground and get close. maybe get some details in there. then to take it even a step further, that goes into your editing. that can also add to the photo. but the raw photo itself, you need to get creative.
hope that helped?
No, that is False. They normally occur in the layer called the Troposphere. The Troposphere is where all the plains and the jets fly. The Mesosphere is too high,
Answer:
When used as nouns, shade is an uncountable noun that refers to an area of relative darkness blocked off from the light. Shadow, on the other hand, is a countable noun that refers to the silhouette or dark image formed by an object blocking the light. It is what causes the darkness.
Explanation:
D. 3 beats in the measure because there’s two quarter notes (1 bt each) and two eighth notes (1/2 bt each); second measure has a half note (2 bts) and a quarter note (1 bt).