RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Photography’

In Motion: Weekly Photography Challenge

21 Sep

This week your photographic challenge is to take and share an image on the theme of ‘In Motion’.

Image by Midlander1231

This gives you a great opportunity to practice a range of photographic techniques (like panning, zooming, slow sync flash) in a variety of settings – after all there’s ‘motion’ everywhere around us.

Before you head off to shoot your image – here are a few posts from our archives that might help with capturing some motion shots:

  • How to capture motion blur
  • 13 places to practice taking motion blur shots
  • A beginners guide to capturing motion in your photography

Once you’ve taken your ‘In Motion’ shots, upload your best ones to your favourite photo sharing site either share a link to them even better – embed them in the comments using the our comments tool to do so.

If you tag your photos on Flickr, Instagram, Twitter or other sites with Tagging tag them as #DPSINMOTION to help others find them. Linking back to this page might also help others know what you’re doing so that they can share in the fun.

Also – don’t forget to check out some of the great shots posted in last weeks Available Light Portraits challenge – there were some great shots submitted.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

In Motion: Weekly Photography Challenge


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on In Motion: Weekly Photography Challenge

Posted in Photography

 

30 Jaw-Dropping Examples of Performance Art Photography to Astound You

21 Sep

Art connects people. That’s a fact. While different cultural backgrounds, social status, genetic factors, personal experiences, upbringing and many other factors conspire to separate individuals, it falls to art to connect people: the artist, who is putting forth a message that is very personal and a deep part of himself, and the audience, who takes the time to listen and Continue Reading

The post 30 Jaw-Dropping Examples of Performance Art Photography to Astound You appeared first on Photodoto.


Photodoto

 
Comments Off on 30 Jaw-Dropping Examples of Performance Art Photography to Astound You

Posted in Photography

 

Taking Shots of Your Car Like the Hot Ride She Is: Amazing Car Photography Tips 101

18 Sep

Anyone who has tried to shoot a photograph of their new car (or their old, well-loved car after it finally drove through the car wash) knows that a car is difficult to capture. Nevertheless, those of us who have practiced can vouch for this series of tips that I’ve aimed at my neighbor’s Mustang and my own practical Prius. The Continue Reading

The post Taking Shots of Your Car Like the Hot Ride She Is: Amazing Car Photography Tips 101 appeared first on Photodoto.


Photodoto

 
Comments Off on Taking Shots of Your Car Like the Hot Ride She Is: Amazing Car Photography Tips 101

Posted in Photography

 

Even the Best Photography Enthusiasts Have Their Limits

17 Sep

It doesn’t matter how much talent a photography enthusiast might have, what equipment they own or how comprehensive their technical skills, there are a number of jobs that they’re just never going to land. When it comes to the biggest, the most lucrative and the most demanding photography gigs, paying clients will always turn to a professional.

They want to be able to deliver a brief to someone who understands it. They expect the photographer to arrive on time. And, most importantly, they want to know that they’re going to get back the images they need.

And they also want to work with someone they know. That’s more likely to be a professional who has the motivation and the time to build those connections. You might have a great eye and know exactly how to focus and play with light but paid jobs still go to the people who know something equally important: the people who hand out the commissions.

But that doesn’t mean you can’t pick up paid work that’s nearly as satisfying — even if it doesn’t pay quite as much. Here are five professional jobs that enthusiasts can’t land and the alternatives that they can.

1.     Executive Portraits

When it comes to photographing the head of a corporation, giant firms won’t look at anyone less than an experienced professional. They’ll want a photographer who can give instruction to someone more used to giving orders than taking them and who’ll make the best use of the small amount of time available. Each time the board has to ask an executive on a multi-million dollar salary to stand and pose for twenty minutes, it costs the company thousands of dollars on top of the fee paid to the photographer. They won’t want to pay that fee twice, so they’ll always go for professional they can trust who can shoot fast and get the right images first time.

Enthusiast Job: Family and Pet Portraits

A non-professional might not be asked to create a portrait of Jeff Bezos, but he or she can certainly create other kinds of portraits. Build a portfolio of family photographs or offer pictures of pets and you might not get to spend time with the leaders of the corporate world but you will get to shoot  and tell stories through faces — and you’ll get paid for it.

2.     Fashion Shoots

Fashion shoots are complex. They might involve a designer and an art director, models and exotic locations. Hotels have to be booked, sites scouted, clothes delivered and make-up applied. The images that come out of a fashion shoot are the product of a team and every member of that team will be a professional, from the guy who drives the van to the person who arranges the flowers. Fashion companies will fly photographers to their shoots and pay them four-figure daily fees rather than run the risk of not getting the pictures they need.

Enthusiast Job: Street Fashion Photography

You have to be a professional before a fashion house will put its clothes in front of you, but anyone can photograph the fashion that’s already in front of them.  Scott Schuman was a fashion professional before he took time out to look after his daughter and started a blog showing his own photographs of street fashion. The success of thesartorialist.com has turned him from fashion enthusiast to photography professional.

3. Photojournalism

Enthusiasts can certainly sell their images to the press, a process that has become easier in the age of Twitter and Instagram for people who happened to be in eventful places at the right time. But newspapers are unlikely to send a photographer who hasn’t undergone professional training to a dangerous spot. For news editors, it’s important not just that the pictures come back but that the photographer does too. Before they commission a story, they’ll check the photographer’s experience as well as his or her pictures.

Enthusiast Job: Crowdsourced Documentary Photography

You might struggle to persuade an editor to give you a commission but you can persuade friends, family and other enthusiasts to pay for your idea. Emphas.is is a crowdfunding site specializing in documentary photography. You’ll have to market your idea to bring in the funds, but it’s much easier than marketing to a skeptical photo editor.

4. Architecture Photography

It’s not that businesses don’t believe you can shoot their buildings or their interiors; it’s that they know that lots of professionals with full portfolios and rich portfolios can do it at least as well. They know some of those photographers and they trust them. So why should they turn to an amateur they don’t know?

Enthusiast Job: Crowdsourced Documentary Photography

The answer is if you have a style or approach that only you can produce. Businesses will still turn to professionals for the sort of standard shots needed by hotels and resorts but they might turn to an artist for a special look. And creating those artistic architectural images will be an enjoyable end in itself even if you have to work hard to persuade gallery owners to show them or art fair buyers to pay for them.

5. Industrial Shoots

Mines, factories and other industrial sites are all professional places, staffed by professionals and shot by professionals too. Their owners might need images to document the work that takes place in them but they’re going to need a very good reason to turn to someone who isn’t a professional to take those images.

Enthusiast job: none

There are some jobs for which enthusiasts have no equivalent. While you’re out photographing landscapes or cashing in your emphas.is funds, professional will be at industrial sites, shooting workers and trying to make giant bits of machinery look good.

They might be getting paid, but you’ll probably be having more fun — and that’s always the best reward for any enthusiast. 


Photopreneur – Make Money Selling Your Photos

 
Comments Off on Even the Best Photography Enthusiasts Have Their Limits

Posted in Equipment

 

CreativeLive to broadcast six days of free photography workshops

17 Sep

PhotoWeek_640x360.jpg

The folks behind CreativeLive, an online resource for photographers co-founded by Chase Jarvis, have kicked off Photo Week: six days of educational workshops streamed live online for free. Workshops will be broadcast over three channels with topics including wedding, family and portrait photography. It begins today – click through for more details.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on CreativeLive to broadcast six days of free photography workshops

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Get 6 Days of Online Photography Training For Free This Week at Photo Week

16 Sep

photoweek_logo1.pngHere at dPS we are all about helping people of all experience levels to improve their photography.

This week we’re excited to see our friends at CreativeLIVE putting on a free online event that will help you do just that – it is called Photo Week and we think you’ll really love what is on offer.

Starting today and over the next 6 days CreativeLIVE have 50 amazing photographers coming into their studios to run full days of live workshop training on many many aspects of photography.

They’ve arranged the training into 3 tracks:

  • Wedding and Family – Explore the art — and business — of capturing life’s most important moments.
  • Portrait and Commercial – Learn how to delight commercial and editorial clients with these 20 workshops.
  • Create what you love – This series of 19 workshops covers everything you need to know about exploring your passion — whether it’s exploring toy cameras or getting back to the basics

The quality of trainers and training will be amazing – I hardly know where to begin with the lineup they’ve got. Here’s a quick screen shot of the instructors!

photo-week.png

The best thing about Photo Week is it is all shown on the CreativeLIVE site for free throughout the week.

You can pay to get recordings if you can’t make all of the sessions you want to see or would like to play them back over and over again – but if there’s just a few sessions you want you can tune in when they are on and grab them completely for free.

See the full 6 day schedule and RSVP for Photoweek here.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Get 6 Days of Online Photography Training For Free This Week at Photo Week


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Get 6 Days of Online Photography Training For Free This Week at Photo Week

Posted in Photography

 

All You Need to Know About iPhone Photography

16 Sep

You have your iPhone on you all the time; it’s like your best friend with whom you go everywhere. In fact, you can say that you’re in a long-term relationship with your iPhone, and that’s completely fine! If you’ve played around with your iPhone for any length of time, you know how you can do so many things with it. Continue Reading

The post All You Need to Know About iPhone Photography appeared first on Photodoto.


Photodoto

 
Comments Off on All You Need to Know About iPhone Photography

Posted in Photography

 

How I Shot It: Food Photography

15 Sep

A post by freelance commercial and editorial photographer, food stylist & writer -Andrew Scrivani – one of the course presenters at next weeks Creative Live Photo Week.

8C5A4826

In food photography, most of the time, the art direction we receive is pretty straightforward. I like to start by discussing the color palette of the piece. The season of the year can certainly influence how I approach the shoot. A regional theme or ethnicity that needs to shine through the images may also drive the selection of the propping, table surfaces, linen, and extra food items that may appear on the set. These are the sort of discussions I have when shooting food photos that tell the story of a particular recipe, a certain ingredient, an event, or the style of a particular chef.

I have said in the past that food photography has two concurrent compositions. The first is the food itself. What the food is, where it comes from, and how it is prepared and plated is the first part of the equation. The other is the frame that you put that food in: propping, setting, and scene. The combination of these two should allow you tell the story that you intended to tell.

8C5A5179 1

Occasionally, I get asked to flex a little mental muscle and make food pictures that go above and beyond these traditional elements. The images I am focusing on here did not begin with a food story, so to speak. They started with an abstract concept, an idea of how to illustrate the crossroads between food and beauty. We needed to illustrate how certain foods are part of your “beauty tool kit” — like make-up brushes, tweezers, eyelash curlers, etc.

8C5A4879 1

The art director and I sat at a table with a pad and pencil and started to scribble notes and sketches on what we could do with pomegranates, tweezers, raw fish, makeup brushes, coconut water, edamame, eyelash curlers, and “grass fed” beef. Several of these came together in flashes and ‘aha’ moments as we paired a tweezer with an open pomegranate and placed the soy bean pod in an eyelash curler.

The fanned-out tails of the fish and the makeup brushes made for a natural juxtaposition that was really pleasing to the eye and avoided reminding you of a dead fish. We also felt really confident that we could show a beautiful Porterhouse on a bed of grass to underscore to its grass-fed origin.

IMG 4719

We hit a stumbling block with one of the items that was essential to the story but exceptionally hard to fit into our established theme. We had to show that coconut water was part of this “tool kit.” Coconut water, having no real color or texture, was difficult to pair with any of the beauty items. So, since we had maintained a consistency with the rest of the images by using a piece of hot-rolled steel as our table surface to give a little nod to the industrial notion of “tools” we felt that the thread was strong enough to not include an actual tool. The second part was trying to avoid shooting any packaging of a commercially available coconut water and not doing the obligatory “coconut-with-a-straw shot.”

8C5A5162

The final result was arrived upon in this shot where after draining off the water from a fresh coconut, I smashed the shell with a hammer and used the shards as design elements in an overhead shot. The idea here was to show a dramatic and striking composition that really hit home the idea that these foods, included in your beauty regimen, are powerful partners in looking and feeling your best.

The overall message here is that whether you are trying to tell an obvious story, or one that requires a little bit of imagination, every single visual detail should contribute to the story the photos convey. The reader shouldn’t have to read a single word to understand the story the photos are telling.

For more food photography tips, check out my blog and my upcoming creativeLIVE course during Photo Week which starts on Monday.

Photoweek logo

Andrew Scrivani is a New York based freelance commercial and editorial photographer, food stylist & writer. Andrew’s work has been seen in magazines and newspapers worldwide including, The New York Times, Eating Well Magazine, La Cucina Italiana, The Wall Street Journal and Newsweek. His work is also currently featured in international advertising campaigns by Red Lobster and Sargento Cheese.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

How I Shot It: Food Photography


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on How I Shot It: Food Photography

Posted in Photography

 

IFA roundup: What’s new in mobile photography tech

14 Sep

note3.JPG

Following the major mobile technology exhibition IFA in Berlin this week, we’ve got a roundup of some the most interesting photocentric tech we tested during the show. From the newest version of Samsung’s Galaxy Note III to an innovative camera phone from Acer with an actual ring flash, manufacturers are paying special attention to the imaging abilities of mobile devices. Take a look at what caught our eye at IFA on connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on IFA roundup: What’s new in mobile photography tech

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Speedlight Lit Portraits: Weekly Photography Challenge

14 Sep

This week we’re continuing our themed challenges in the Portraits Direction to celebrate the launch of our Portraits: Lighting the Shot eBook by pursuing the theme ‘Speedlight Lit Portraits’.

Answer Me

So your challenge is to shoot and share a portrait image that is lit using a speed light flash (or more than one if you want to go that direction). While this might limit participation by some Speedlights are the most common type of lighting among our readers so hopefully it’s accessible to a lot of you.

Gina covers a lot of techniques that will be useful for you on this front in her eBook but whether you’ve got it or not we’d love to see your attempts shared in comments below!

Once you’ve taken your ‘Available Light’ photos, upload your best ones to your favourite photo sharing site either share a link to them even better – embed them in the comments using the our comments tool to do so.

If you tag your photos on Flickr, Instagram, Twitter or other sites with Tagging tag them as #DPSSPEEDLIGHT to help others find them. Linking back to this page might also help others know what you’re doing so that they can share in the fun.

Also – don’t forget to check out some of the great shots posted in last weeks Available Light Portraits challenge – there were some great shots submitted.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Speedlight Lit Portraits: Weekly Photography Challenge


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Speedlight Lit Portraits: Weekly Photography Challenge

Posted in Photography