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Posts Tagged ‘Photography’

All 7 Photography Deals are Back – But only until Friday!

09 Jul

Photography resources

It’s been another huge dPS mid year sale and we hope you’ve enjoyed it as much as we have sharing it with you.

Over 7 days, 7 amazing photography deals were released, 24 hours at a time.

But did you miss a deal you’d love to have?

Well, we’d like to give you one last chance before they’re gone for good (it’s about helping you with your photography, after all).

So until Friday, all 7 deals are back!

  • Deal #1: Living & Loving Landscapes ebooks – $ 10 each
  • Deal #2: 60% OFF Photography Concentrate’s Incredibly Important Composition Skills
  • Deal #3: 100 Hacking Photography Lightroom presets for $ 10!
  • Deal #4: Our Photo Magic ebook – just $ 7
  • Deal #5: 70% OFF Photoshop Artistry: Fine Art Grunge Composition course
  • Deal #6: Jay & Varina Patel’s Focus Collection – 50% OFF
  • Deal #7: Our Portraits ebooks $ 7… or 5 for $ 21!

This is the last time we’ll email you about this sale and we simply can’t extend the deals any further than Friday (they’re just too good).

So act quickly or you’ll miss out!

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7 Street Photography Rules That Should Be Broken

07 Jul

There is an all-too-common path that many people follow when they begin to practice street photography. They grab their camera, go to the busiest place they can find, and capture people head-on over and over again.

While this is certainly something that you should do, it is not the only thing. I want to dispel a few myths about street photography to help broaden the content that you photograph. There is a wide range of ways to capture interesting street photographs for you to try.

Plant, Chase Bank

Plant, Chase Bank

1. People need to be present in the image

Street photography is about people, but it does not have to include them. This type of photography is about life, and you do not need to smack a person in the middle of a frame to have it be a street shot.

The goal for this type of photography is to capture unique and interesting moments that mean something to you. There is no rule for how to do this without people in the frame, but the goal is to go beyond the typical pretty landscape shot, and foster some sort of meaning and uniqueness within the image.

No matter where you live, but particularly if you live in a less populated area, it can be good to focus on this idea. Explore your surroundings and try to explain it through your imagery. Include people when you can, and when it furthers your aim, but look for unique shots of your surroundings at the same time.

If you find a great area with beautiful light, then capture it like it is. It is a typical mistake for photographers to mess up a really interesting scene by including any random passerby. Often people seem to think that this passerby is what makes the image a street image, but that could not be further from the truth. If you find a good background and want a person to be in the shot, that person needs to be able to add to the photograph. Otherwise, try to just capture the scene as it is.

2. You can only photograph on busy city streets

Front Yard, Burbank, California

Front Yard, Burbank, California

Explore the work of Martin Parr, Lee Friedlander, William Eggleston, Stephen Shore, Robert Frank, and Trent Parke, among others. Some of these photographers have photographed prolifically in very busy places, but all of them photographed, at some point or another, in areas devoid of people. Whether it is a shot of a busy beach/resort scene or a shot of a British pastry, you can still identify an image that was created by Martin Parr. Lee Friedlander’s images all have an eerie and dark quality to them (at least that’s how they make me feel) no matter if they were taken on a New York street corner, in a hotel room, or on an empty street in the suburbs. Study the works of these photographers taken in less populated areas and figure out which images appeal to you the most and why.

Street Photography can be done almost anywhere. Great photographers have a knack for learning how to take strong photographs in areas that others may think of as lacking content. Go to areas that you think would be terrible for photography, and try to figure out how to take a good photograph there. This is a very powerful exercise for your growth.

3. Never photograph a person’s back / You must always include the face

Hands, SoHo, NYC.

Hands, SoHo, NYC.

While the face is one of the most powerful ways to show emotion in an image, it is not always necessary to include it, particularly if it has a boring expression. Missing a person’s face because of bad technique or fear is one thing; if the face is good, you should capture it. But gestures, hands, a pose, clothing, or a specific element on a person can all be the most interesting part of an image. In these cases, it might be best to get close and capture just that interesting element. Doing that, and getting in close to the details, can also give an image a graphic quality that makes shapes, lines, and colors stand out.

4. You need a lot of depth and many different things happening in the scene for it to be effective

Bags, SoHo, NYC.

Bags, SoHo, NYC.

I very much like shooting this way and if you are a fan of Alex Webb’s work, you probably already understand the allure of a complex image that shows multiple levels of interest, all put together in a single frame. When done well these images can be incredible. They are wow images. These are situations that you should seek out.

However, compositions like this do not make the photograph good. What makes a photograph good is what is happening in it. Search for that first, and then you can figure out whether it will be better to create a complex image with a lot of supporting elements, or whether it will be better to just focus on the main element. It will be counterproductive if you walk out the door looking to create only images like Alex Webb. Look for interesting things and then figure out the best way to frame them.

5. Great street photographs are all about luck

As photographers we create our own luck. There is an element of randomness to every candid photograph, but the reality is that thousands of these “lucky” moments occur around us everyday that we don’t see.

Photography is both about waiting for these moments and about seeking them out. If you put in the time to shoot, you will come across many moments, no matter where you are. As you improve as a photographer, more moments will not occur around you, you will just get better at noticing them.

6. Street photography is about being bold

Hair Tug, SoHo, NYC.

Hair Tug, SoHo, NYC.

Some street photographers are very extroverted and bold. Some are quiet and timid. Some get in your face with a flash, and some wait carefully for something to happen in front of them. Work around whatever personality you have. If you are an introvert, then there is a good chance that getting a running start as you pounce on a person with a flash like Bruce Gilden will be tougher for you to pull off. It’s important to create a strategy of shooting that feels comfortable for you. Otherwise, if you are not having fun out there, then you are not going to want to put in the time necessary to get good images.

No matter what, you are going to have to bring yourself out of your comfort zone. You are going to have to figure out what you want your images to look like, and what you need to do to pull that off. If you want to use a zoom lens, use it because you like the look of a telephoto image, not because you are afraid to get close. If you are afraid to get close, use a light wide-angle lens, pick a spot, and let people come to you. Inch a little closer each time. You do not have to jump in there with cameras blazing to capture a good image. Figure out how to locate moments that are interesting and then develop your way of being able to put yourself in the right spot to capture them. Over time you will improve and feel like you belong there.

7. Street photography is about the extraordinary

There is a typical moment that I come across when teaching. I will be photographing with a student and suddenly a person with red, blue, or green hair, or covered in tattoos, will pass by. The student will take that shot faster than any shot they’ve taken the whole day. That hair or the tattoos just clicked as an interesting street image in their minds. Red hair can be interesting, but it is just one element. While it stands out and feels extraordinary and different, it’s not actually that unique.

Street photography can focus on anything. It can be colorful, mundane, ordinary, or something overt. A lot of the most incredible street photography actually captures ordinary moments in ways that feel extraordinary. Street photography is about finding the extraordinary in all types of moments. Do not just sit there looking for red hair. Seek out people and scenes that fly below the radar, and capture what makes them interesting.

Fence, East Village, NYC.

Fence, East Village, NYC.

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7 Major Elements of Photography Business Plan

06 Jul

Did you know that entrepreneurs who create a proper business plan are usually two times more successful in developing and growing their business than those who have no business plan? This is according to a study conducted by Palo Alto Software. Just as you wouldn’t typically begin a photo shoot without proper lighting and gear setup, starting your own business Continue Reading

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Create Stunning Works Of Art from Your Photography: Our Most Popular Deal Back for 24 Hours

06 Jul

Today as part of our Mid Year Deal week we’ve got two amazing courses for you from the amazing Sebastian Michaels.

Deal 1: 70% Off Photo Artistry: Fine Art Grunge Composition Course

It’s back! But for 24 hours only…

Photoshop Artistry: Fine Art Grunge Composition course — at an incredible 70% off the RRP!

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This was the hottest deal featured on our site in 2014. It flew out the door and smashed records in our dPS Christmas sale.

So due to popular demand, we’ve brought it back for one more day here!

Create Stunning Works Of Art from Your Photography

If you want to go from merely editing your photos to creating intricate photo-art compositions, then this is is the deal for you.

This cutting edge course will awaken your creative genius and reveal the secrets the pros use to create stunning works of art.

By showing you how to create something new and extraordinary with your images, it will completely transform the way you approach your photography and use Photoshop. You’ll find yourself turning out richer, more sophisticated compositions than you ever thought you could create.

With glowing reviews and an unbelievable amount of included value (over 70 training videos, downloadable PDF cheat sheets and over 7GB of bonus pro-designed content), you definitely can’t go wrong with this one.

And at $ 89, it’s a MASSIVE $ 208 off… a price course creator, Sebastian Michaels, has only offered to dPS (you won’t find it anywhere else).

Go ahead and see what all the fuss is about!

Deal 2: Awake: Living the (Photo)-Artistic Life – $ 118 Off the Normal Price

NewImage

If you’re like one of the many dPS readers who took advantage of this deal in our Christmas sale, Sebastian’s new course is sure to tickle your fancy, too…

‘Awake: Living the (Photo)-Artistic Life’ is about waking up to all the possibilities and beauty around you — stimulating your imagination, vitality and inspiration, to find your unique artistic voice. Your art will become a more present, more powerful part of your life.

With a full year of training, artist tutorials and pro-designed content, spots in the course are limited. So at $ 118 off the normal price just for today, you’ll have to be quick!

Sign up here.

Grab one or grab them both – these courses from Sebastian are only available at these prices for 24 hours!

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Plains, trains and automobiles: The landscape photography of Bill Leigh Brewer

05 Jul

Bill Leigh Brewer’s career in photography started with a road trip, a Canon AE-1, lots of Kodachrome 25, and The Clash. His landscapes lend a surrealist quality to the commonplace and unique aspects of Americana, without demeaning its subjects. Take a look at his work and read our Q&A. See gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Photography in public places across Europe threatened by harmonization proposal

04 Jul

The right to use pictures taken in a public place is under threat by a European Parliament proposal for the harmonization of copyright laws across the region. Buried in a complex set of amendments is the idea that the automatic Freedom of Panorama be removed from those countries that maintain it, so that copyright holders of permanent artworks and buildings will need to authorize commercial use of pictures that include their works. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Weekly Photography Challenge – Bright Colors

04 Jul

In this image roundup I gathered a set of images that contain bright colors, more specifically the colors of summer.

James Blunt

By James Blunt

Your challenge this week will be to do similar.

Weekly Photography Challenge – Bright Colors

The real challenge with incorporating bright colors into your photography is to make sure you have a clear subject. Of course the subject can be color itself as well, but you need to still showcase the subject. Keep that in mind as you tackle this one.

Even if it’s not summer in your part of the world, go find some bright colors and make some good photographs.

Liam Moloney

By Liam Moloney

Dean Hochman

By Dean Hochman

Sergiu Bacioiu

By Sergiu Bacioiu

Peddhapati

By peddhapati

Share your images below:

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section) and they’ll get embedded for us all to see or if you’d prefer upload them to your favourite photo sharing site and leave the link to them. Show me your best images in this week’s challenge. Sometimes it takes a while for an image to appear so be patient and try not to post the same image twice.

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6 Tips to Find Undiscovered Photography Locations in Your City

02 Jul
This location was discovered by walking BEYOND the main public area and exploring nearby dirt paths.

This location was discovered by walking BEYOND the main public area and exploring nearby dirt paths.

There’s nothing quite like the rush of finding a nook, a cranny, a wall, a corner, or a building that looks amazing in photos but has not been fully discovered by others just yet. Ask any photographer about unique locations, and most likely they will cringe a bit at the thought of giving up their secret spots. How, then, do you find new locations for yourself? It’s not always necessary to go outside of your city (or even your neighborhood!) to find a great photography location.

Here are several tips for how to find those hidden gems you crave:

1. Break routine

Do you have a usual way to drive home from work? How about that super fast shortcut that you love to take when meeting friends for dinner? Set some time aside to go a different route, and really look at your surroundings as you drive by. Take note of things like texture, if there is a lot of shadow or direct sun on a wall, if there are bright colors, and if certain areas have easy access from the road. Are there any buildings that stand out to you? How about the landscaping – any beautiful trees that provide a dramatic canopy or a large flowering bush that has bright colors?

Use this designated time to explore, stop spontaneously when something speaks to you, and take some quick sample photos (even if with your phone!) to keep on file for future reference.

Cell phone shot while exploring is on the left.  Finished photo for a family portrait is on the right.

Cell phone shot while exploring is on the left. Finished photo for a family portrait is on the right.

2. Leave the car at home

This may sound extremely basic, but if you are like most people, you’re used to driving everywhere. While this is a huge time-saver, it also causes you to not SEE your surroundings in as much detail. When you walk, you see the cracks in the sidewalk, the nooks full of graffiti in the small alley behind the shops, or the vantage points that can be seen at eye level. Changing your perspective is an instant way to re-evaluate your surroundings. If you’re not able to walk, consider riding your bike. It’s still a more leisurely way to explore the details than by car would be, and it’s much easier than a car to stop repeatedly and explore.

Not visible from the street, this pedestrian bridge gets overlooked from a car.

Not visible from the street, this pedestrian bridge gets overlooked from a car.

3. Ask

Sounds simple, right? Yet, how many of us actually do this? Most of us will search online, scan the forums and Facebook groups, and explore on our own. All this, we do instead of simply asking those around us. Next time you go into a small local store, ask the clerk if they have any favorite spots for photos, or ones that offer a fantastic view. Reach out to other local photographers you know; ask them if they have any locations they love going back to time and time again, and if they would be willing to take you there sometime. Ask your friend or relatives if they have any spots in town that they’ve always thought would be great for photos. Their answers may surprise you. Oftentimes, all you need to do is ask.

Many locals recommend this property, but few use the old carports as backdrops. Cell phone shot on left, final portrait on right.

Many locals recommend this property, but few use the old carports as backdrops. Cell phone shot on left, final portrait on right.

4. Create an assignment

It can be overwhelming to just get in your car and drive without knowing what you’re seeking. To make things easier, give yourself a specific type of location that you’re looking for that day. Perhaps you want to find a beautiful skyline view of your city, or you want to find a wall that has colorful graffiti for a backdrop. Maybe just give yourself a theme – industrial buildings, or lush bright flowering landscapes, or open pastures, or patterns.

Having a goal in mind can give you some direction as to where to start looking. Looking for rustic and open? Head out of the city and into wide open spaces. Looking for urban and gritty? Go straight for urban neighborhoods and industrial areas of town.

On a search for great texture and patterns, this wall was discovered. It is part of a research facility at a local university.

On a search for great texture and patterns, this wall was discovered. It is part of a research facility at a local university.

5. Yes, asking Google can help, too

Let’s face it, we go to Google for all our questions these days, and that’s okay. Do a bit of online research, keeping in mind some parameters for what you’re seeking. If you’re looking for old industrial buildings, be sure to enter that into your search. Be as specific as you can be, then get more general as needed to widen the net. There are also a good number of websites and books about “weird places” or “abandoned places”, all of which would have loads of appeal to photographers. If you do seek out abandoned or off-the-beaten-track locations, be sure to take all safety precautions possible to ensure a safe return.

Researching abandoned locations in the desert resulted in this location near a major attraction.

Researching abandoned locations in the desert resulted in this location near a major attraction.

6. Keep records of your discovered gems

This is a tip about finding locations, but more about making sure to remember them. Find a system that works for you to keep track of locations you like, what type of work they may be suited for, any outstanding characteristics, and any sample photos you snapped while exploring. While everyone will have a slightly different way of organizing this information, Google Maps is highly recommended for marking locations on a map and adding notes.

If you have a Gmail account, you can go to Maps and create your own. After each outing, you can add pins to locations you want to remember, name them whatever you’d like, and even add a few notes. In addition to this, I would recommend keeping a folder on your computer that is specifically for sample photos of locations. This comes in handy, not only for remembering a location yourself, but also for showing a potential subject and convincing them of your vision for their photos.

An ongoing project - the personalized Google Map.

An ongoing project – the personalized Google Map.

Have you found tucked away locations that you are proud of? What tactics did you use for stumbling upon these spots? Please share in the comments below.

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Fairytale Photography: 50 Images With a Moody Narrative Style

01 Jul

[ By Steph in Art & Photography & Video. ]

photography oleg oprisco 5

Each of these moody, dreamlike images feels like a moment from some larger story that remains a mystery to the viewer, forcing us to become active participants in the work by filling in the blanks. Whether working with props in a studio, using only analog film photography techniques or capturing incredible images with little more than an iPhone, these photographers lure us into an alternate reality with narrative images that leave us wanting more.

Aela Labbe

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Photography Aela Labbe 5

Of all the gorgeous images French dancer and photographer Aela Labbe has created, perhaps the most striking are her portraits of children. “My family is another key that unlocks the world I have created through photography; my nephews, in particular, are the main protagonists of my photographs. It was thanks to them that childhood has become a recurrent and determinant theme in my work. It is based on a different vision that aims to show a darker side, and mystery, through unconventional representations of the early time of life,” she tells Feature Shoot.

Elena del Palacio

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Photography Elena del Palacio 3

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Madrid-based photographer Elena del Palacio explores the relationship between women and nature in a series of photographs placing her subjects in vulnerable places and positions.

Courtney Brooke

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The specific magic that can only be found in the foggy hills and forests of New England is frozen in time within each striking image created by Western Massachusetts photographer Courtney Brooke, who is often armed with no more than an iPhone and an exceptionally keen eye for composition and mood. “I pull inspiration from photos taken in earlier dates and the rich history of my environment. I strive to create a visual moment that urges the viewer to question spirituality, the human experience and ones own connection to the universe.”

Katharina Jung

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At just twenty years old, German photographer Katharina Jung infuses her portraits with a heady sense of mystery and emotion. “I would describe my style as a mix of daydreams and fairytales,” she says. “The fascinate thing in photography is the way I can deal with my feelings and the way I can convert my daydreams into images. Photography allows me to create the world I would love to live in.”

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Fairytale Photography 50 Images With A Moody Narrative Style

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[ By Steph in Art & Photography & Video. ]

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8 Tips for Gorgeous Fashion Photography

01 Jul

Most young photographers are convinced that fashion photography is an impossible dream. The glamorous international lifestyle, the huge audience, the awe-inspiring photoshoots and the high-paying checks are only some of the reasons why this sought-after profession seems inaccessible. But while there are no easy checklists or sure-fire plans to ensure your success, there are certain small steps to bring you Continue Reading

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