10 Tips To Better Photography

May 11
2010

10 Tips To Better Photography

So you are a photographer, and yet you still want to get better at your craft. Taking great photos are not as difficult as you may think. You don’t always need the best equipment or have the most experience than other photographers, but just 10 easy tips and you will be on your way to great photographs.

1. Use All Your Available Space

2. Get Closer To Your Subject

3. Put Motion Into Your Pictures

4. Study Forms

5. Learn To Use Contrasts Between Colors

6. Continuous Shots

7. Shutter Lag

8. Ability To Pan

9. Take Fantastic Night Time Photography

10. Have Fun

Use All Your Available Space

Many photographers are afraid to fill their full space in fear of clutter, but don’t be afraid. Go ahead and takes shots with no or very little background, but try to keep distractions out. This is a great way to really understand what is in your view.

Get Closer To Your Subject

One of the biggest errors that photographers make is not getting closer to their subjects. Usually it is out of fear that the subject may be too close for any contrast. Get up close and take that shot. You can always resize it later and make it a better photo.

Put Motion Into Your Pictures

If your intent is to shoot a stationary object, then try to avoid any motion in your shot. If your are trying to be creative in a life of motion, then by all means, do what you can  do to capture that motion. Also, be aware of your horizontal line as you do not want to run it through the middle of your photo, try to keep it on the thirds.

Study Forms

This is a huge part of photography. Don’t view objects as objects, but rather as different shapes and forms and then shoot your photos from the best possible angle. Shooting different forms of an object will separate you from other photographers or from the average person that happens to have a camera.

Learn To Contrast Between Colors

Some of the best photos are when a subject has only one color focused on it, but when it is set up to be in contrast with other shades of colors is what gives it that highlight. Some of the best photos use the different shades of white, black and gray.

Continuous Shots

To take continuous shots, you will need a camera or an attachment that will allow you take this kind of photos. Having a continuous shot camera means you do not to stop and process after every shot. If you do have to process after every shot, it may mean the difference between getting boring or missed shots and getting “the shot.” Especially if you shoot any form of sports, a continuous camera is a must.

Shutter Lag

As mentioned in Continuous Shots, shooting actions shots with digital cameras can be difficult to shutter lag.  This means that when you press the button to shoot your picture, it may take a second or two to actually take the photo. By the time your camera is ready to take the next picture, your subject as already moved. You then have to anticipate your subject’s next move and hope you get your shot.

Ability To Pan

While taking action shots, know your shutter speeds. If your shutter speed is slow, pan along with the object. Start with the object and pan at the same speed it is going until you get the shot you want. Take several this way, because usually one shot will not capture what you were trying to achieve.

Take Fantastic Night Time Photography

If don’t right, night time shots can be fantastic! Yet at the same time, if done wrong, they can be a big mess. You will need adequate lighting, otherwise your shots will not turn out the way you want them too.

Have Fun

Most importantly, have fun shooting photos. Whether it is for recreation or for business, the trick is to have fun and continue to hone your skills by practicing over and over again. Also, try to be creative, whether it’s something someone had done before or try to create something new as the sky’s the limit.

So as you can see, shooting photography is not rocket science. You just want to keep it simple while you continue to learn all aspects of you camera and what it will allow you to do. Remember, your camera is only a tool used to capture your vision of an object, but only you can give that object, or scene, life.  So take your time, don’t get frustrated, study, practice and once again – have fun.


Maui digital photography

Feb 09
2009

How to choose a digital camera

The quality of a digital camera is mainly defined by four quantities: resolution, lens aperture, lens zoom range, lens quality, and software. CCD sensitivity also varies somewhat.

Resolution

Nearly all digital cameras use CCD’s as the sensing element. This is what takes the place of film. The resolution is the number of pixels in the captured image. Computer images are divided into little dots called pixels. The more pixels, the more detailed the image can be. Here is a guide to choosing resolution, estimating the size print you can make from each:

* 1.3 Megapixel = 1280×960: Great 4×6′s, acceptable 5×7′s.
* 2 Megapixel = 1600×1200: Pretty good 8×10′s.
* 3 Megapixel = 2048×1536: Great 8×10′s, good 11×14′s.
* 4 Megapixel = 2272 x 1704: Great 11×14′s, and acceptable 16×20′s.
* 5 Megapixel = 2560×1920: Pretty good 16×20′s.
* 6 – 10 Megapixels = At this point you are usually limited by the lens, not the pixels.

Casual photographers are satisfied with bigger prints from each size, while those who like to look at 8×10′s from a distance of three inches think I am being too generous in the above evaluations.

Lens aperture

The aperture of a lens is its maximum opening. The bigger the aperture, the more light is gathered, and the less light you need to take a good photo. This is the most overlooked lens specification, but it very important, especially if you like to take photos indoors without flash or from a reasonable distance.

Lens aperture is measured in f/numbers, such as f/2.0 or f/3.5. An aperture of f/2.0 literally means that the lens opening is half the focal length of the lens. Thus, smaller numbers mean bigger lens openings. You would rather have a lens that is f/2.0 than a lens that is f/4.0.

I really like have a fast (large aperture) lens. It means I can shoot photos indoors without flash, and these look a lot more natural than flash photos. You can also take a lot of photos less obtrusively without a flash. Digital photographers tend to shoot a lot of photos, and you can drive people nuts if you shoot 20 flash photos in ten minutes. They will hardly notice your shooting these twenty shots with flash disabled, and you will get much better candids.

So, what is a good aperture? The answer is getting worse, not better. I would prefer not buy a camera with a slower lens than f/2.8. My favorites a few years ago were the Olympus C3040Z and C4040Z, with f/1.8 lenses. These days, you will have trouble finding a non-SLR camera with an f/1.8 lens. The best seems to be f/2.8 – f/3.5.

Note that cameras with zoom often have a range of maximum apertures listed, such as f/2.5 – f/4.0. This means the maximum aperture at the most wide angle setting is f/2.5, and the maximum aperture at the most telephoto setting is f/4.0.

Lens zoom range

A zoom lens has a variable focal length. The focal length determines the magnification of the lens. A short focal length is a wide-angle lens, great for taking in large vistas. A long focal length is a telephoto lens, allowing you to get a tight photo of a distant object or person. A zoom lens lets you combine both of these and everything in between into a single adjustable lens. If a camera has a 3X zoom, it means that the longest focal length is 3 times the shortest.

In the subsequent discussion I am using 35-mm equivalent focal lengths.

Most digital cameras have a 3X zoom, with a focal length range from around 35 mm to 105 mm. 35 mm is a modest wide angle, and 105 mm is a modest telephoto. Superzoom cameras have extreme zoom ranges of 8X or 10X. These generally have about the same minimum focal length of around 35mm, but these usually have a much longer maximum focal length. Digital SLR’s almost always have interchangeable lenses that allow you to pick whatever focal length you want.

Long focal lengths mean you can get a tight photo of your children’s faces, or a shot on the soccer field where you child is actually recognizable. Extreme focal lengths let you get in real close to the action even from the sidelines of a soccer field.

(Important: ignore “digital zoom” specifications in ads. Only pay attention to optical zoom. Digital zoom is of no value. All it does is crop the image in the camera. You can always crop an image in software after you have transferred it to your computer, and you have more freedom at this time.)

Long focal lengths present problems for photographers. It is hard to hold a camera sufficiently stable at a focal length of 300 mm. Bright sunlight helps, and a tripod or monopod can do wonders. An increasing number of cameras with extreme zooms have stabilized lenses that compensate for camera shake. Good stabilization can make a remarkable difference in sharpness of handheld shots at extreme focal lengths. Do not buy a superzoom without image stabilization unless you plan on using a tripod.

At the time of this writing, I believe most people are best served by one of three classes of cameras:

* Ultracompacts with a zoom of roughly 3X. The great virtue of these is that you can always have your camera with you. The quality of the better ultracompacts is astounding for their size.
* Superzooms with a zoom ratio of roughly 10X – 12X. Only a little more than the better ultracompacts, they let you reach out for the distant photos. Be sure to get image stabilization.
* Digital SLRs. This is what the pros use, and for good reason. You can choose any of a wide variety of lenses (for a price), and you can take beautiful photos with less light. But these are big and expensive.

Lens quality

Lenses with the same focal length and aperture can differ substantially in quality. A poor lens is not as sharp, and it may exhibit chromatic aberration, which means that all colors are not brought to the same focus. This usually shows up as colored fringes at high contrast edges.

Unlike aperture and zoom range, you cannot read the lens quality of the camera box. The two best approaches to getting a good lens are (1) read reviews, and (2) stick with reputable camera companies. I tend to trust camera companies such as Olympus, Nikon, and Canon more than electronics companies who only moved into cameras with the advent of digital photography. I think it is easier of a camera manufacturer to incorporate good electronics than for a camera company to incorporate good optics. A few of the electronics companies are buying optics from reputable lens companies.

In-camera Software

Here I am not talking about photo software that comes with your computer, but rather the software built into the camera. Taking a digital photo means a fair amount of computation. When you snap a digital photo, the camera first grabs a “pre-photo” to determine the brightness and color balance of the scene. It then shoots the real picture, based on the earlier information.

This is an important calculation. The importance of brightness is obvious. Less obvious is how radically the colors of different light sources are. Slide photographers no this. If you shoot standard “daylight” film indoors under incandescent lights, everything is orange. Film photographers see less of a problem, because the processing labs that print our photos correct for most of these color shifts. With digital photography, you want the camera to do all of this color compensation for you. This is not easy, since the camera needs to distinguish between incandescent illumination and a daylight scene with a lot of red and orange colors.

The good news is that some cameras do a remarkable job, giving you better color rendition than you have ever seen short of expensive custom work by custom photo labs. My own sense is that Olympus does the best, with Canon and Nikon very close seconds. Sony seems to lag behind in this regard.

Media type

Most digital cameras use CompactFlash or Secure Digital. The difference is not worth worrying about unless you already have a good supply of one type. Many Sony cameras use their own proprietary “memory sticks”. I prefer to avoid proprietary solutions, as it restricts your future choices considerably. The trend is toward Secure Digital.

Digital Photography

Sep 26
2008

You’ve heard this before: Digital cameras do all the work. You just push the button and great pictures magically appear. The better the camera, the better the photos. Isn’t that right? Heck no!

The truth is that you can make great photos with a simple consumer point-and-shoot camera, or take lousy shots with the most expensive Canon. It’s not the camera that makes beautiful images; it’s the photographer. With a little knowledge and a willingness to make an adjustment here and there, you can squeeze big time photos out of the smallest digicam.

To help you down the road to great image making, here are ten tips that will enable you shoot like a pro (without maxing out your credit card on all that expensive equipment).

1. Warm Up Those Tones

Have you ever noticed that your shots sometimes have a cool, clammy feel to them? If so, you’re not alone. The default white balance setting for digital cameras is auto, which is fine for most snapshots, but tends to be a bit on the “cool” side.

When shooting outdoor portraits and sunny landscapes, try changing your white balance setting from auto to cloudy. That’s right, cloudy. Why? This adjustment is like putting a mild warming filter on your camera. It increases the reds and yellows resulting in richer, warmer pictures.

If you don’t believe me, then do a test. Take a few outdoor shots with the white balance on auto, then take the same picture again with the setting on cloudy. Upload the images to your computer and look at them side by side. My guess is that you’ll like the warmer image better.

2: Sunglasses Polarizer

If you really want to add some punch to your images, then get your hands on a polarizing filter. A polarizer is the one filter every photographer should have handy for landscapes and general outdoor shooting. By reducing glare and unwanted reflections, polarized shots have richer, more saturated colors, especially in the sky.

What’s that you say? Your digital camera can’t accommodate filters. Don’t despair. I’ve been using this trick for years with my point-and-shoot cameras. If you have a pair of quality sunglasses, then simply take them off and use them as your polarizing filter. Place the glasses as close to the camera lens as possible, then check their position in the LCD viewfinder to make sure you don’t have the rims in the shot.