My best tip is simple.
Learn the basics, then master the basics.
Learn how to compose and frame a shot. Learn how to use lighting -- highlight and shadow. Learn what an exposure value is and how f/ stops, shutter speeds, and film speeds effect an exposure. Learn how different focal length lenses change your framing. Learn what depth of field is and how to use it creatively.
Once you gotten proficient with the basics, keep at them until you master them. In other words, know your craft as a photographer. Don't go out and take a few hundred shots in hopes that you'll have a half dozen good ones.
Start to think in terms of the frame of your viewfinder and how to compose within that frame. Start to think "photographically." In other words, when you see something that might make an interesting subject, figure out how to compose a picture of that subject. Have an idea what your finished picture will look like before you ever put viewfinder to eye.
There are no tricks to photography. It's a lot of work to get it right, but once you do, it is one of the most rewarding hobbies/vocations you can have.
2007-09-26 10:29:55
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
1
2016-12-19 23:25:50
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Check here a good photography course online:
http://photography-course.info
You can be like the masses of humanity and buy a camera you can afford that has auto this and that for worry free picture taking. And learn through trial and error how to use something like aperture or shutter priority auto modes or even attempt to use the thing on full manual mode.
You seem to know already there is some thinking to using a camera and to take pictures. A good place to start is by reading the owners manual that comes with a camera. Read the information and look at the illustrations with part names and look at the real camera. Handle the camera and take pictures. Let me rephrase that. Take pictures to learn how to use the camera and maybe even to keep some. Don't start with important stuff you cannot photograph over again such as birthdays, a toddlers first steps. That puts picture taking out of the learning phase and puts the pressure and emphasis to taking pictures for real and to keep.
These first pictures are for you to learn how to use your camera. And you have learned how to use your camera when you can take pictures with it and can teach others how to use it. Honest. You can also go to a college in your area and take a beginning photography course. There you will be taught the basics even a pro must learn and do in their work. Camera handling and use, taking exposures with film and/or digital cameras, and maybe even some photo assignments to get some real time learning. In this learning do not take serious pictures you must keep as that detracts from the learning aspect of the class. Do so only if you have mastered the use of your camera before class is over.
It's like growing up in a way. And I am happy you know there is a way to learn how to use a camera and take pictures. It's like learning how to drive I suppose. Someone can teach you or you can get taught at a driving school. Both will get you a drivers liscense. One though will really teach you the fundamentals you can use for the rest of your driving career.
2014-10-28 17:34:36
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Try Trick Photography Special Effects : http://Photography.findpolo.com
2015-12-09 01:32:43
·
answer #4
·
answered by Ina 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
DSLR photography doesn't need to be over-complicated. This online photography course has been developed for beginners - intermediate levels and will teach you how to make the best use of your DSLR camera. https://tr.im/rTtgG
Learning how to confidently use your DSLR will help you get full value out of this awesome camera you have already paid for!
This course has been developed after seeing many potential photographers give up far too soon, wasting good money they have spent on the purchase of their DSLR camera.
2016-02-14 14:34:15
·
answer #5
·
answered by Luana 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
I have, on occasion, taken portraits of horses for clients.
Full on side views were no problem, since most of the horse's body was, essentially, on the same plane.
It was in taking 3/4 views that I discovered a problem. With my regular lens, I found that the horse's head loomed HUGE, while the body diminished in size, farther back. The result was very freaky looking, giant headed horsies!
The solution was to mount my telephoto lens. (The 100mm worked fine) I stepped back, away from the horse, and the distortion went away. From a far enough distance, even the huge animal's entire body was, pretty much on the same relative plane.
Think of fisheye lens in reverse.
No distortion and happy, paying clients!
2007-09-27 08:48:52
·
answer #6
·
answered by Vince M 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Tips? Read about photography.
Read biographies and/or autobiographies about famous photographers. Margaret Bourke-White. Walker Evans. Edward Weston. Robert Capa. Dorothea Lange. Gordon Parks. Minor White (no relation to Bourke-White). W. Eugene Smith. Edward Steichen. Alfred Eisentaedt. David Muench. Ansel Adams.
Read camera magazines.
Study the art and craft of photography. Learn your camera so well you can operate it blindfolded. Study about light and ISO and f-stops and shutter speeds. Learn them until they become part of your subconscious and you no longer have to think about them - you just "know" what to do and when and how. Learn the "Rules of Composition" so you will know when and how to bend and/or break them. Stop looking at your surroundings and start seeing them.
Give yourself assignments - take a series of photos about litter. Take one of old buildings. Document a day on a street in your town - from sunup until sundown, all the comings and goings. Pretend you only have 72 exposures and make each one count - as though there was no Photoshop.
Find useful tools and buy them. Go to fotosharp.com and order their Day & Night Exposure Guide so you can take good photos in low light and at night. Go to expoimaging.net and order their ExpoAperture2 so you'll know about depth of field. Buy their ExpoDisc so you can achieve perfect white balance in mixed lighting.
Slow down. Study the scene before you*. See it from different points of view. Kneel down. Climb up on a rock or tree. See any distractions like powerlines or litter or anything else that will detract from your photo and figure out how to eliminate them. Before releasing the shutter check your viewfinder. Is there a tree "growing out" of Aunt Millie's head? Is there a powerline "running through" your dad's head? Is there a dog relieving himself on a tree in the background? Are there beer bottles in the background?
Stop making 300 exposures and hoping 20 or 30 will be worth saving*. Get the image right in the camera. Get it right in the camera.
* Obviously there are times when this won't apply. If you see a plane on fire and about to crash or a tank truck spinning out of control its shoot! shoot! shoot!
2007-09-26 09:10:46
·
answer #7
·
answered by EDWIN 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
2
2017-03-08 23:27:49
·
answer #8
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
hey i'll give you a nice trick ..> prepare your cam in low sutter speed like 4 sec or more then try to take a pic (in dark) to a moving spot light(s) of any kind and see what will you get ;)
2016-03-19 00:41:46
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
My best advice, puchase a professional copy of Adobe Photoshop for editing and learn it inside and out. It's my best and favorite tool.
2007-09-26 08:35:29
·
answer #10
·
answered by happyendinggs 2
·
0⤊
1⤋