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Posts Tagged ‘fall’

Photographing Fall Foliage

24 Sep

Fall colours can be very different from place to place. Some areas will have a very short colour-changing season of a week or less, while elsewhere it can last nearly a month. Every location will produce different colours, depending on the type of flora and other factors such as climate and soil.

The hillsides of New England, which attract thousands of photographers every year, are famous for their dappled assortment of species producing different shades, ranging between reds and greens.

Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, by Anne McKinnell

The Sierra Mountains of California and Nevada, on the other hand, are known for their vast yellow forests of Aspen and Birch.

Do some research into your area to find out when the leaves are expected to change so you can make the most of this opportunity. A quick Google search will help you find the best areas for autumn foliage in your vicinity.

If you’re planning a photo expedition, you can use services such as Flickr and Panoramio to see what different areas look like at different times of the season, simply by searching tags for the time and place you’re considering.

Whatever the Weather

No matter how the weather behaves when you go out shooting, you can get great shots in any type of light. If it’s sunny, you have plenty of light to work with, but you may get harsh shadows and glare that can diminish the colours. To conquer this, try using a polarizing filter, changing your angle of view, or shooting when the sun is low in the sky.

If the sky is white, simply leave it out of the composition. The soft light of a white sky day is perfect for photographing the smaller details which will be free of bright areas and harsh shadows.

Fall in New Hampshire by Anne McKinnell

A rainy day might seem like a wash-out, but water actually brings out colour like nothing else. The best time to shoot is right after it stops raining, especially as the sun peaks through the clouds to illuminate the saturated landscape.

If there’s a sudden cold snap, you might find some frost forming on your foliage. If you brave the cold, you can capture some amazing textures, particularly in the early morning when the air is crisp.

Techniques

Backlight

If you position a leaf between your camera and the sun, the back lighting will illuminate it all the way through making it appear to glow and revealing the details of the veins. If the sky is visible between the leaves, try it on the blue sky day for a beautiful colour contrast.

Backlit Maple by Anne McKinnell

Reflections

Photographing leaves can be especially difficult on a windy day. On these occasions I try to find reflections of the fall colours and create a more abstract image.

Fall Reflections by Anne McKinnell

Perspective

Leaves that have fallen on the ground are excellent subjects. Try getting a squirrel’s point of view for a unique perspective.

Mushroom and Maple Leaf by Anne McKinnell

Try looking straight up into the trees to emphasize their tallness and magnificence.

Fall Trees by Anne McKinnell

Waterfalls

Combining the beautiful colours of the fall leaves with a silky smooth waterfall can be magical. Try using a long exposure to blur the water as it cascades past the fallen leaves.

Fallingwater Cascades, Virginia, by Anne McKinnell

Close-ups

A simple, minimalist composition can be just as evocative of the season as a complex scene. Try getting close to a single leaf and using a wide aperture, like f/2.8 or f/4 to achieve a shallow depth of field that isolates fine details.

Autumn Oak Leaves by Anne McKinnell

Camera Settings

  • Depth of Field: Decide how much of the picture you want to be in focus, and use your aperture to control the depth of field.
  • Underexpose: To deepen the tones and make the colours stand out more, underexpose your image slightly. The easiest way to do this is to locate your exposure compensation (+/-) button and dial it down somewhere between -0.5EV and -1.0EV.
  • White balance: If you’re photographing during the golden hours (just before sunset or just after sunrise), you probably don’t want your camera’s auto white balance to eliminate the light’s yellow-orange tone, which is exactly what it will try to do. However, if you set your white balance to “daylight”, your pictures will retain the sun’s warm glow. Try different settings in any given lighting situation to find the best colour balance. It is particularly important to get this right if you’re shooting JPEG files, but if you use RAW format, the white balance can be perfected in post-production.

Fall Umbrellas by Anne McKinnell

Composition

When we find a great autumn location full of dramatic colours, it can be easy to become overwhelmed by the colour and forget everything else. Fall colours don’t create a good landscape photo on their own, they simply add an element of colour. The composition should be strong even when turned black and white, so remember your basic rules of landscape composition: create a focal point, and use lines, shapes, and forms to create balance and harmony.

To create images that stand out from the rest, compose them with thought and purpose, and never be afraid to try a different angle.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Photographing Fall Foliage


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Fall Instagram Inspiration

23 Sep

We’re not sure what it is about autumn that makes us feel downright snap happy!

Maybe boots and sweaters just make us feel more poetic than flip-flops.

We know how quickly autumn’s colors fade, and we don’t want you and your lens to miss a minute of it.

So we’ve scoured Instagram for the season’s best hashtags to inspire you to trade in your lemonade for a latte, then get out there and capture fall in all it’s glory.

Fall in Love with the Season’s Most Inspiring Hashtags

why it’s cool

All Link and Henry David Thoreau had to do when their spirits were down was visit their magical ponds. Lucky punks.

We don’t have a magical pond, but we do have a whole internet full of inspiration.

We’re big fans of Instagram, and we especially love the efficiency of the hashtag. It’s a great tool when there’s a certain something we’re trying to capture, be it a subject, place or even a particular color. 

Pulling up a hashtag and spending time with other people’s work helps our photography to keep moving in a fresh direction. With 150 million users on Instagram you’re bound to find someone who makes you see things from a whole new angle.

FANCY FOLIAGE #LeafPeeping

beforeGrams and Pop-Pop used to take us for a scenic drive every fall, which was great until Pop-Pop started belting out Tom Jones, we ran out of cookies and our sister started poking us in the ribs.

These days we like take a gander at #LeafPeeping to enjoy the scenery without ever leaving our couch — or sharing our snacks.

When you head out to capture that leafy goodness for yourself, set your alarm clock to take advantage of that “golden hour” right after sunrise. Or, you could snuggle in for an extra 50 winks and hold out for those just-before-sunset rays.

FAIR GAME #CountyFair

beforeLife doesn’t hand us too many opportunities to capture swirling neon lights, deep-fried snack cakes and Nigerian Dwarf goats all in the same venue.

The #CountyFair might not be such a great place for watching your waistline, but it’s always a good place to grab some fun and fanciful photos.

Apps like Slow Shutter Cam (iPhone) and Camera FV-5 (Android) offer DSLR-like control over your shutter speed, giving you the best shot at getting your best shot of swirling and whirling rides during evening hours.

GROWTH INDUSTRY #harvest

beforeIt was all we could do this summer to keep the tomatoes on our balcony alive, so we’re totally in awe of the work that real farmers put in every year.

Farmers all over the United States are reaping what they’ve sowed this time of year, and it’s a nifty thing to witness. All those golden #harvest hues are really pretty.

Don’t have access to your own agricultural landscape? Head to a corn mazes or apple-picking orchard, which give you full access to farm photo ops without the responsibility of keeping things alive.

CLEAR EYES, FULL HEARTS #FridayNightLights

The contrast of a ginormous floodlight against a clear night sky makes us happier than a backside defensive end on the sunny side of a scrape-exchange cutback.

OK, so we don’t know what that means (or if it means anything at all).

But we do know that a night at your favorite local sporting venue can make for some dramatic and dynamic photos. Check out #FridayNightLights for a quick pigskin fix.

Grab an iPhone Telephoto Lens to get right up in the action!

Taking It Further


Now that you’re totally inspired…

  • Pick out a nearby deciduous muse and take its pic at the same time every day. String the results together with your own hashtag — #JuliaFallsforFall2013, perhaps? — for an awesome time-lapse glimpse of fall.
  • Create a hashtag for your next event so your friends and family can share their pics from #BigJims4thAnnualJimboree, #WandaAndRoderickLeafTour13 or #TheHarveyFamilyCatInASweaterNationals. (Or possibly something like #SmithFamReunion, if your family is more normal than ours.)
  • Take some leaves home and make some chemical-free prints with your scanner.
  • Join us in sharing the fall-tography at #PhotojojoFall. We’ll be looking for your autumnal visions!

Big thanks to pde_; leahohh; hilldwellertom; Amber and her buddy Anubis; Annie Smith; Pocono Tourism; Mandy Cooke; Tiffany Cornwell; leahohh; and shazzwright for sharing their inspirational Instagram photos with us!

Related posts:

  1. 12 Fantastic Fall Photo Tips — Our Extra-Crunchy Guide to Leaf Peeping
  2. A Healthy Dose of Photo Inspiration — George Lange’s 2006 Photo Flipbook Every so often, we run across photos that make us…
  3. 500 Photographers – 100 Weeks of Photo Inspiration Carbonmade, Your online portfolio Find 5 active, amazingly talented photographers…


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Splendid Fall Photography Tips and Tricks to Make The Most Of This Gorgeous Season

06 Sep

Fall is indeed a magical time for everyone. With the air becoming clean and crisp, you get to dust off your overcoats and walking boots. You’ll hear the chopping of the wood that will see everyone though the winter months. But there is nothing more recognizable with the season of autumn than the colors associated with the falling of the Continue Reading

The post Splendid Fall Photography Tips and Tricks to Make The Most Of This Gorgeous Season appeared first on Photodoto.


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Book of Cities: Rise & Fall of 10 Places Over 200 Years

16 Aug

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

book of cities infographic

We take it for granted that London and New York will grace the pages of books, but would you be surprised to learn that Madrid and Cairo were once as commonly referenced, or that Mumbai and Beijing are now two of the most popular cities capturing global imaginations?

city popularity infographic

Edgard Barbosa created this infographic (above) and other associated graphics (below) to explore the ebb and flow of famous cities in works of fiction and non-fiction alike.

city data in books

From its creator: “Books of Cities measures the quantity of books, written in the English language, that refers to 10 major cities in the world between 1800 and 2000 … it gives an overall idea of the amount of literature produced in each era about the same city.”

book of cities poster

The graphic covers London, New York City, Rome, Paris, Chicago, Tokyo, Madrid, Beijing, Mumbai, and Cairo, and shows how some cities, like Mumbai and Beijing, have recently hit the scene in a major way. Others, meanwhile, like London and NYC, have consistently attracted attention for much of the last few hundred years.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

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Camera shipments continue to fall

01 Aug

CIPA-logo-1.jpg

The Japanese imaging manufacturers association, CIPA, has just released its global shipments report for the first half of the year, and there’s not a lot of good news in it. Between January and June 2013 Japanese manufacturers shipped just short of 30 million digital cameras – that’s a 45% drop in a single year. And it’s not just point and shoots in decline: SLR and mirrorless sales are down too. More after the link…

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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25 Stunning Snow Fall Images

15 Feb

20051124 - First Snow of the Year - 1

As an Aussie it seems a little strange to be posting this post right now because we’re experiencing a lot of sun right now – but based upon the people we follow on the dPS Twitter account it seems that the many of our readers are (and have been for a while) snowed in right now.

Hat frame

So in tribute to our northern hemisphere readers – we decided to put together a series of images that feature the humble ‘snow flake’. Yes – all these shots capture snow falling in the hope of inspiring those of you whose cameras have been put away for the winter to get out and shoot!

Winter Tales

Snowfall.

102/365 Snowfall

In the cold I'm standing

Let It Snow

» Shamble

Knit

Waiting in the Moment.

In the cold I'm standing

64/366---Shoveling Snow --Gota love Canadian Winters

Forbidden Snowflake

fun 52.52

Christmas lovin'

The Snowflake Taster

the first snow

Shibuya in the snow: these people think I'm nuts, and they might very well be right :-)

Toque & Tails

football_pville_nwc_9872.jpg

overkill.

Snowstorm

winter wonderland 4.52

Let it snow... II

let it snow

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

25 Stunning Snow Fall Images


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Woods sounds, fall 2011

03 Feb

leaves crunching, insects (locusts mostly)

Diablo 3 beta. Wizard encounters a near death experience. Check out our Diablo 3 site in danish: www.diablo3x.dk

 
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Yosemite Nature Notes – 14 – Horsetail Fall

03 Jan

Horsetail Fall is a small, ephemeral waterfall that flows over the eastern edge of El Capitan in Yosemite Valley. For two weeks in February, the setting sun striking the waterfall creates a deep orange glow that resembles Yosemite’s historic “Firefall.”
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Simran brings Gudiya to her home and gives her a lot of care and affection. Sonu unwillingly agrees to migrate to the US with Manas. Urmila breaks downs as Sonu and Manas meet her before going to the US. Simran too feels sad to part from Manas and Sonu.

 

Nikon D300 Fall 2009 Photography “Commercial” Slideshow

02 Jan

All these photos were taken on a Nikon D300 DSLR camera with either the Nikkor 18-55 f/3.5-5.6G, 50mm f/1.8D, 55-200 f/4-5.6G VR, or 35-80 f/4-5.6D. All photos edited in Adobe Photoshop CS4 and compiled into this slideshow with Adobe After Effects CS4. Sound cut done in Adobe Soundbooth CS4. Please go to: www.flickr.com for all the latest photos and www.thereflectionist.deviantart.com For all the archives.

 
 

I AM NIKON – Making of Video Fall 2010 HD

15 Nov

NIKON COMMERCIAL
Video Rating: 5 / 5

movie : mockmoon mockmoon.sblo.jp music : PROPAN MODE propanmode.net camera Canon EOS 5DmarkII Lens : PC-micro Nikkor 85mmF2.8D Place : Mitsumineguchi Station, Saitama, Japan
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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