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Freddy said:
What's your best photography tips?
What is one important piece of advice would you give to someone just starting out in photography?
What skill level would you say you're at?
DrLeftover said:Take A LOT of pictures, look at them, have somebody else look at them, figure out what you like and what you don't, LEARN something, then...
Take A LOT of pictures, look at them, have somebody else look at them, figure out what you like and what you don't, LEARN something, then....
Take A LOT of pictures, look at them, have somebody else look at them, figure out what you like and what you don't, LEARN something, then....
Don't use a camera that is so complicated you spend more time mucking about with it than you do taking pictures.
I started out with a Speed Graphic taking pictures of a garbage collectors strike back in the eighties.
I still shoot like I'm doing news photography. Even when I am working for my wife who IS a photographer and has shot several weddings, and I am her "second shooter". We have gotten several good comments from various brides, and, more importantly, the Bride's Mothers!
my three most recent photo essays:
http://themediadesk.com/newfiles7/agexpo.htm
http://themediadesk.com/newfiles7/fischer.htm
http://themediadesk.com/files8/train.htm
DrLeftover said:You need to learn how to frame a shot, basic lighting, composition, and so on. YOU need to know that, not the magic picture box.
DrLeftover said:Agreed on the "brutally honest" part.
Disagreed on camera features.
You need to learn how to frame a shot, basic lighting, composition, and so on. YOU need to know that, not the magic picture box.
Too many of the new 'fancy' cameras do too much for you, so when you end up with a crappy picture, you have no idea if it was something you did or the camera was having a bad day.
DrLeftover said:True
I keep forgetting that some of those WalMart "point and shoot" cameras do take pretty good pictures now.
Nebulous said:DrLeftover said:True
I keep forgetting that some of those WalMart "point and shoot" cameras do take pretty good pictures now.
They should, you can get some pretty hefty megapixels from there.![]()
Megapixels is just the amount of data captured. Yes it is important.
But if you took a crappy picture, you just have a huge file full of 'noise', bad composition, motion blur, or whatever, and it is still a bad picture.
And even if it is sitting as a "Camera RAW" file in the latest and greatest Lightroom, Photoshop or whatever, there is only so much you can do to it before it starts looking like it has been worked on.