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7 answers

taking amazing photos doesnt really depend on the type of camera ... its about composition, perspective, creativity etc ... its about practice practice practice ... and the good thing about digital is that you can delete the ones that arent that good and keep the ones that are ... then there are programs like photoshop where you can play around with them afterwards to create interesting effects etc ... good luck.

2007-01-06 20:43:08 · answer #1 · answered by Vee 2 · 0 0

ukmobile's answer is spot on.
You really do need an image working program of some sort. Adobe Photoshop is the standard world over, but expensive and hard to learn. Photoshop Elements, the latest version is 5, does much of what big brother does at a fraction of the price. There is also Microsoft's Digital Imaging Suites, and PaintShop.

I would recommend Bryan Peterson's book, "Understanding Exposure". Also, if you are new at photography, get a beginner's book and learn about how cameras work, what the different settings do, and composition. Then read your camera's manual thoroughly, know what the buttons and menus are, what they do, and how it effects your image.

In the end, the photographer makes the picture, not the camera or the post processing. Those things help, but the vision has to be there in the beginning.

2007-01-07 02:03:40 · answer #2 · answered by Ara57 7 · 0 0

You can make changes to a picture that is developed by kodak etc. using an image editing program just as you can with a digital image. The thing is if you take a picture with a digital camera you then connect a lead to the computer to get your picture onto the computer losing no quality, to get a picture from a non digital camera you need to scan the developed image onto your computer and this method loses quality.
Even photographers are learning digital photography and honestly it isnt that hard, a middle of the rang digital camera will take fantastic images, having moved onto digital photography now I would not go back. Please note below a free image editing program you can download.
http://www.freeserifsoftware.com/software/PhotoPlus/

2007-01-07 10:33:04 · answer #3 · answered by Sam k 4 · 0 0

It all depends on the quality (high, medium and low) of the pictures you should select as well as the resolution (how many mpix: mega pixels) that your camera has ... (4-8) mega pixels is mostly same resolution but again quality what matters...in easy way, if you wanna get a good a picture in your camera then turn quality for "high quality" mode and enjoy your pictures....but you should consider the size, a hgiher quality means a bigger size in your memory card.

2007-01-07 00:16:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Adobe Photoshop

2007-01-06 20:47:10 · answer #5 · answered by It Co$t To Be Around The Bo$$ 4 · 0 0

Cameras do no longer take great photos. a individual with know-how of sunshine and composition and f-stops and ISO and shutter speed and the flexibility to apply that know-how makes use of the digicam to make the image. "photos are no longer taken, they are made." Ansel Adams. merely visit any shop that sells cameras and look at ones on your budget. purchase the single you like terrific. Now for the particularly complicated area: examine & learn the owner's instruction manual on your new digicam previously you attempt employing it. by potential of doing this you'll particularly the best thank you to apply the digicam.

2016-11-27 01:31:08 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You could take a class in photography. Go on line and find a class schedule for photography in your home town or city.

2007-01-06 20:57:35 · answer #7 · answered by Anne2 7 · 0 0

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