RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Photography’

Three Useful Tips On How To Make Your Photography Backdrops Fun

31 Jul

Untitled-1

The popular image of a professional photographer is of somebody who takes portrait pictures against a purely white background. To the very top with their profession, this really is all they desire, but it is more common in a photography business to find customers who want dynamic backgrounds. These could be of the nation’s flag, or simply of different colors, however the professional photographer will also be able to provide additional options. Amateur photographers and people studying the subject at school, will also want to use more than just an ordinary white background. Rather than going for traditional colors or images like flags, it’s a good idea to shake some misconception a little by utilizing fun and dynamic photography backdrop sets to present your subjects a much more interesting picture. There are lots of ways in which you are able to improve the appearance of your respective backgrounds.

1) Get Relevant
Use striking images that is popular with customers. There will always be themes which people find interesting, like fairy-castle, racing cars, and holiday themes. It is easy to purchase posters and also other accessories that can fit into the theme, and printed backgrounds can be acquired which will satisfy your clients. By way of example, as the Twilight series is as popular as ever, a spooky theme, with large full moons, and mists, will surprise clients who want to theme their picture around the popular book and film series. Needless to say, this type of background also doubles as a ‘rock and roll’ theme, therefore it is a good purchase for those on a low cost. Bricks or walls as backgrounds will also be very popular, although sometimes your subjects will have their own ideas in what they want. Some clients have even joined together with the fun and dressed up as a comedy villain and heroine, together a backdrop of a train appearing about to run them down. These types of backdrops may bring out the fun side of clients, and also help you to capture a good portrait ones.

2) Go Wild
One other popular theme with people and one which may be turned into a fantastic and fun picture is nature image. The seaside is particularly popular, and also the photographer can enhance the image with the addition of buckets and spades. This backdrop is perfect for children, but young partners might prefer a more ‘windswept’ theme. Nature can even be charming, so performing a portrait picture of a family with their pets could be enhanced by using a ‘nature’ picture to their rear, full of animals. For anyone with an eye for the budget, self-printed images of animal prints can be quite a good alternative, or even a large print tablecloth with animal images on can be a cheaper replacement for buying printed backdrops.

3) Try it for yourself
Of course, don’t assume all professional photographers contain the budget to splash on a variety of different backdrops, which is where the principle of DIY could be a good way to come up with a fun background without splashing the cash. The best form of DIY photography backdrop is one made from torn sheets of colored paper, or ribbons, strung in the studio utilizing an old curtain rail. These could look particularly effective if you adopt a colour scheme, such as green or blue strips. Ribbons help give a classier look to the images, because they have neat edges, and appear smooth and professional. An alternative for these backdrops is by using wallpaper or print stamps to make fun and original backgrounds. See TheLAShop for excellent photography ideas.

BlogPhoto

 
Comments Off on Three Useful Tips On How To Make Your Photography Backdrops Fun

Posted in Equipment

 

Leisure Dives: Planking Meets Parkour & Midair Photography

31 Jul

[ By WebUrbanist in Global & Urbex & Parkour. ]

leisure dive suit drink

Parkour and free-running are fine for athletic types, while planking and the lying-down game are great for lazies, but suspended somewhere in between we find the leisure dive.

leisure dives with cocktails

Blending the action-packed art of diving and cavalier nonchalance of sipping a cocktail, the actual site (Leisure Dive) started as a Facebook phenomena with a few pictures and spiraled out of control from there.

leisure dive newspaper jump

Variants include: hopping off a bike in mid-jump, or holding something other than a drink. Other details aside, though, appearance is critical – the less you look like someone prepared to splash into a pool (or other body of water, or hard-packed dirt) a few moments after your photograph is snapped, the more convincing the effect.

leisure dives various photos

For those wishing to get in on the game, the instructions are as follows: (1) Grab some friends, a decent camera, and head somewhere chill near a body of water. A swimming pool works. A lake will do. A river? You crazy. (2) Put on a bathing suit. Or a linen suit. Or a koala suit. Anything leisurely. (3) Grab something that says you are just a chilled out individual. A piña colada. A pitching wedge. A harpsichord. Whatever. We all unwind differently. (4) Find a nice perch from which to jump. Make sure you have a leisurely backdrop and a safe landing. (5)Now jump in, and embrace the leisure. Tip your glass. Pop your elbow. And most importantly, look at the camera with a face that says, “Does this suit make me look awesome?” The answer is yes. And, SNAP.

Share on Facebook



[ By WebUrbanist in Global & Urbex & Parkour. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]

    


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Leisure Dives: Planking Meets Parkour & Midair Photography

Posted in Creativity

 

Photography campaigners close to saving Fox Talbot archive

31 Jul

Tiger.web.jpg

A campaign launched by Oxford University’s Bodleian Libraries to acquire a valuable archive of images by photography pioneer Fox Talbot has been thrown a £200,000 lifeline. Campaigners want to ‘save’ the archive of images, which has been transferred to a New York dealer with an eye to selling it on the open market. If the campaign is successful, the historic collection will remain in the UK. The massive £200,000 (~$ 300K) donation takes the campaign to within £375,000 of its target of £2.25 million. Click through for more details. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Photography campaigners close to saving Fox Talbot archive

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Digital Still Life Photography [Book Review]

30 Jul

Digital Still Life PhotographyThis is a sumptuous book in a number of departments: it’s large, beautifully printed and full of useful, easily navigated information.

So why the word ‘digital’ in the book’s title?

Author Sint explains ‘I hate using Photoshop to correct my mistakes because I feel the time required to do so is both unproductive and unprofitable. … what I really love more than Photoshop is downloading pictures that I find pretty close to perfect the moment I open the image’s file.’

The book’s style is thoroughly disarming and direct to the point: when approaching a still life photograph the first step, Sint suggests, ‘is to spend a moment thinking about what type of photograph you are trying to create.’

He then describes the techniques in shooting simple setups on a plain background, the need for speed and the need to plan your shoot efficiently. After all, time is money and the more shots you can pack in per hour the higher your financial return. This book Sint affirms is about ‘how to make a living taking pictures …’

An initial step is to select a suitable shooting space. It should ideally be a big space, one that includes an office, shooting area, storage for props etc, conference area, makeup room and maybe a kitchen. However, in an effort to describe how little you really need, the author describes his own first studio: a room 250 square feet in area, containing his own twin bed, a dresser, small nightstand … with the remaining 225 square feet dedicated to the studio!

Next, you should assemble the necessary tools to make the space work: timber and the necessary power and hand tools; some form of canned compressed air or even a compressor and more. This is followed by three simple building projects: building a simple set flat; a diffusion screen; a light table.

The important subject of lighting gets serious attention, with tips on how to assemble and use a continuous light array, electronic flash, reflectors, barn doors and snoots, hair lights, scrims, a lighting umbrella etc. The variations in continuous and flash light are explained thoroughly and examples given as to which type suits what subjects.

To give an idea of the depth of detail found in the book, just go to pages 150 and 151 on clamps but not just ordinary clamps but ‘super clamps’! These can do so many more things on a still life shoot than merely position a light as they come in handy to build backgrounds etc.

More follows on soft and hard lighting, the colour of light sources, how to vary a lamp’s colour balance and filtration plus a useful primer on working with fluoro lighting and how to mix it with flash. Fluoros may be 20-30 per cent green in hue so you may filter the flash output with green gels and then add a magenta filter to the camera lens to bring everything back to a daylight balance.

A superb eight page section takes you step-by-step through the shoot of an expensive Cartier watch: how to pose it, light it, position fill lamps. And then there is the fundamental advice never to perform post editing on the original digital file: duplicate! And only work on a copy.

This book will be invaluable to the photographer who wants to move into the studio. Big time!

Author: S Sint.
Publisher: pixiq.
Distributor: Capricorn Link.
Size: 28x22x2cm.
Length: 271 pages.
ISBN: 978 1 4547 03273 3.
Price: Get a price on Digital Still Life Photography at Amazon (currently 50% off).

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Digital Still Life Photography [Book Review]


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Digital Still Life Photography [Book Review]

Posted in Photography

 

Take Your Creativity to New Heights with Self-Portrait Photography

29 Jul

Self-portrait photography, since the beginnings of the industry, has always been popular among photographers. I mean what is there not to love? Finally you get to work with a model that does exactly what you ask of them! Aside from the ego obvious elements, It’s also great for learning how to get to grips with a new camera, practicing newly Continue Reading

The post Take Your Creativity to New Heights with Self-Portrait Photography appeared first on Photodoto.


Photodoto

 
Comments Off on Take Your Creativity to New Heights with Self-Portrait Photography

Posted in Photography

 

Sunset/Sunrise Landscapes: Weekly Photography Challenge

27 Jul

Over the next few weeks – to celebrate the launch of our brand new Landscape Photography eBook (which is currently 33% off) – we are going to be issuing landscape photography challenges as our weekly challenge.

Image by Todd Sisson: Author of our Living Landscapes eBook

Image by Todd Sisson: Author of our Living Landscapes eBook

This week your challenge is to take and share a landscape photo taken at either Sunrise or Sunset.

There’s a section on photographing landscapes at sunset in the eBook to help you with this but whether you’ve read it or not we challenge you to get your camera out over the next few days and to head out early in the morning or at twilight to shoot with it!

Feel free to shoot a landscape in whatever setting you can get to. It might be a rural area, a seascape or even an urban landscape – it is totally up to you!

Once you’ve taken your ‘Sunset Landscapes’ 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 new tool to do so.

If you tag your photos on Flickr, Instagram, Twitter or other sites with Tagging tag them as #DPSSUNSET 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 Leading Lines 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.

Sunset/Sunrise Landscapes: Weekly Photography Challenge


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Sunset/Sunrise Landscapes: Weekly Photography Challenge

Posted in Photography

 

5 Tips for Staying Infatuated With Photography

25 Jul

It takes a lot to hold my interest.  Scratch that—it takes a lot to get my interest, then hold it, and finally (and especially) to keep it.  This makes my dating life quite hard.  And sometimes my relationship with photography even harder.  And with less Happy Hours and coffee dates.  One bad shoot and I’m ready to sell my equipment and call it good.  And go work at Starbucks, where there are benefits and free coffee and cool mandatory aprons.  In my career that has spanned a decade, I have quit, retired, and ran away more times than Brett Farve.  (This comparison really only makes sense if you live in the States, but if you don’t just imagine David Beckham retiring a bunch of times, changing his mind and coming back, and you get the general idea.)

I always come crawling back to photography.  Like a moth to a flame.  Or a crazy ex-girlfriend to your doorstep in the middle of the night, begging for another chance.  Since I’m trying not to do that anymore (both the faux retirement and the crazy ex-girlfriend thing), I have come up with a couple of things that allow a little reset to my photography passion.  Or a jolting wake-up call to remind me of exactly what I love about photography.  Here are 5 of my favorites.  My 6th favorite: completely freak-out and skip town in the middle of the night never to be heard from again, is pretty self-explanatory.

PHOTO ONE

1. Take a Photography Vacation

Not the kind where you take your camera with you for beach sunsets and lively Main Street scenes of locals.  The kind where you go nowhere and your camera gets locked up safe and sound in a closet.  It may sound extreme, but a good week (or two…..or three) away may be just what the doctor ordered.  And what’s fair is fair: this means no Photoshop, no point and shoots, and no saying “if only I had my camera”.  Instead you get to think: how cool that I am seeing this with my own eyes this time and not through a lens.  I will permit an occasional cell phone photo, but only because if I make that off limits, you’ll just rebel anyway.  A week or two away and you’ll crave photography again with rested eyes and fresh ideas.

PHOTO TWO

2. Donate your Services and Skills

This one is my go-to and not only recharges me, but almost always brings me back good energy in some form.  There is no wrong way to do it—compassionately and with great tact, offer up your services to a family that is going through a rough time and may not be able to afford to document their lives at this time.  Or call a non-profit service and brainstorm a way that you taking a few shots could help their efforts in marketing.  Contact a nursing facility and ask if they would like you to donate an hour of your time on their next family day to photograph loved ones with people they don’t get to see often for free.  Hospice organizations, humane societies and animal shelters, and wildlife rehabilitation centers are always thrilled when a photographer is willing and interested in donating their special skill set to their cause.  The photo above is an Executive Director of a homeless outreach program and one of her beloved clients.  It has been featured in gallery shows, used for marketing collateral for their organization, and been auctioned for donation.  I did not receive a penny in compensation for it, but what I did get out of it both personally and professionally is vast and grand and worth more than any fee I’ve ever charged.

PHOTO THREE

3. Flip to the other Side

I am fascinated by this cell phone “selfie” phenomenon on social media right now.  And by “fascinated”, I mean terrified.  I’m not a fan of the other side of the lens in the first place, but you can darn well bet I sure don’t want to be on that other side, blindly taking a self-portrait with a bad camera phone in a bar or a car or whatever.  Not in a house, not with a mouse, not in a box, not with a fox.  However (and I hope you said that “however” with a big giant sigh like I wrote it), not only can it be helpful to getting back in a solid mindset but beneficial in many other ways.  I find that I seem to need a recent photo of myself often as a photographer.  And, let’s be fair here; if I’m not willing to have my picture taken once in a while how can I justify asking others to let me take theirs?  It’s a bit humbling, but also gives me new ideas to try when I’m on the other side.  The photo above (and also by my byline below) was taken by my 9 year old son.  He is darling and thoughtful and creative and perfect and takes after me.  Photography is just a basic part of our lives, so when I asked him to take a picture of me I could use professionally, it wasn’t that big of a deal to hand over two thousand dollars in equipment to a kid that had just used my hair dryer to try to power some Lego contraption he made.  I ended up with a couple of pictures that I like very much, but more than that, I got a bit of confidence and a lovely reminder of how great it feels to look at a picture of yourself you like.  I have the ability to do that for people.  And sometimes I need a little smack in the face to remind myself to stop being a whiney brat and be grateful for my abilities.  Or at the very least, to start renting out my kid.

PHOTO FOUR

4. Photograph something Different than you usually Do

This is a tough one for me, as I got into photography only because I like photographing people.  If you asked me how to take a great picture of a sunset, I would likely try to tell you a very long story about sunsets in hopes that you forgot what we were talking about in the first place.  I have zero interest in taking pictures that don’t involve people.  But I do have a pretty fancy camera and more editing knowledge stored in my brain than song lyrics and that’s saying something.  I also have a need to challenge myself.  For all I know, my best abilities lay in photographing bugs, but I’m never going to find that out if I don’t try.  (But let’s just assume I don’t have any abilities in bug photography and move on, you know?)  One time in a desperate attempt to detour a throwing-my-camera-out-the-window moment of frustration, I came across the picture above.  Taken on vacation a few years ago in Oregon.  And while the raw image is nothing that a true landscape photographer would even look twice at, a little editing and it’s become a photo I’m proud of.  It hangs in my home as the only non-people image allowed to grace the walls and I smile every time I walk past it.  It’s not fancy art.  But it serves as a great reminder that I have a good eye.

PHOTO FIVE

5. Get an Assignment

I’m not what you would call a “self motivator”.  I need things like deadlines and the promise of a cookie when I’m done to get me to actually finish a task.  I actually have to utilize an app that keeps my internet frozen for set times just so my mind doesn’t wander a bit while I’m waiting for a word to come to me and then BAM: I just blew an hour on Pinterest looking at pulled pork recipes and I don’t even eat pork.  When I find myself in a little photographic coma, I sometimes ask a friend to give me an assignment.  Maybe they need a picture of a yellow flower for their yellow flower bathroom.  Maybe they want a picture of their house for a keepsake.  Maybe they can’t think of anything either but know me well and are kind enough to lie to me and come up with something.  Either way, getting an assignment from someone else feels important.  It’s no longer about not feeling like shooting today; it’s about this friend needs this from me and I want to come through for them.  And usually what happens in this little scenario is that I realize I take terrible flower pictures and I need to get back out there and take the kind of pictures I’m good at.

And just like that, I’m recharged, ready, and back in the saddle.  Because to keep retiring gets exhausting.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

5 Tips for Staying Infatuated With Photography


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on 5 Tips for Staying Infatuated With Photography

Posted in Photography

 

Living Landscapes: A Guide to Stunning Landscape Photography

24 Jul

Landscapes coverToday I’m very excited to announce the launch of an eBook that we’ve been working on all year at dPS HQ. It is called Living Landscapes: A Guide to Stunning Landscape Photography – an eBook authored by New Zealand Landscape Photographers Todd and Sarah Sisson.

The eBook We Just Had to Release

Before this release we’ve built up a library of 12 dPS eBooks but the one request we keep getting from readers has been for a Landscape Photography guide.

I’ve long wanted to publish one as Landscape Photography was my own first love but have been waiting for just the right photographer to author the eBook.

I’m glad I waited because at the beginning of last year I stumbled on a Google Hangout with Trey Ratcliff which Todd Sisson. I was impressed with Todd for a couple of reasons.

Firstly his photos were gorgeous – I got lost for a good hour or so looking through his portfolio.

Secondly Todd was a great communicator. He was funny, personal and even on that short Google Hangout I learned a thing or two about shooting landscapes.

Todd and I began to talk about a potential collaboration on this eBook last year and as a result of that initial conversation he guest posted here on dPS with a post called Composing Dynamic Landscape Images. That post was our 3rd most popular post on the site in 2012 and helped hundreds of thousands of people improve their Landscape photography.

This showed us the need for a more comprehensive guide to shooting landscapes and so Todd – and his wife Sarah who is also an accomplished landscape photographer – began to work on creating this guide.

Informative and Inspiring – You’ll Love It!

The result is a gorgeous eBook filled with some amazing photography – it is going to inspire you – but also some really practical tips from Todd and Sarah.

They write this guide in a very down to earth and personal way which will be accessible to those just starting out but also helpful to those who’ve been shooting landscapes for years.

What You’ll Discover in this 130+ page eBook

Here’s some of what you’ll find in Living Landscapes:

  • How to simplify the process of making engaging and technically proficient landscape images.
  • How to overcome the unique challenges that landscape photography presents.
  • The 4 landscape fundamentals that turn bland into beautiful.
  • Workshops and guided tours of some amazing landscape images.
  • A straight forward explanation of the gear you need.
  • Landscape specific post-processing techniques.
  • Advanced tips and techniques specific to the following landscape photography topics: mountains, water, bush and forest, black and white and panoramic stitching.

Grab Your Copy Today and Save 33%

I LOVE this eBook and am so excited to practice what I picked up in it in an upcoming family trip. I’m also looking forward to seeing the images that our readers take as a result of reading this eBook.

Living Landscapes is available for you to purchase and download right now at the special Early Bird Price of $ 19.99 – a 33% discount on it’s regular price.

Want more information about this eBook? Get the Full Lowdown Here. Or grab your copy by hitting the ‘download it now’ button below.

download_it_now_landscapes

// < ![CDATA[ // < ![CDATA[ // < ![CDATA[ // < ![CDATA[ // < ![CDATA[ // < ![CDATA[ function EJEJC_lc(th) { return false; } // ]]>

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Living Landscapes: A Guide to Stunning Landscape Photography


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Living Landscapes: A Guide to Stunning Landscape Photography

Posted in Photography

 

Start Feeling GOOD About YOUR Photography

24 Jul

As I’ve begun teaching others how to edit their photos I’ve begun to realize that a lot of new photographers lack the confidence in their own work. I get questions like “Why don’t my photos look like this?” or “Should I buy a D800 so I can take better photos?” all the time and I’m starting to wonder if it’s simply because people don’t feel good about the work that they do create.

I’ll be the first to admit that I’m my hardest critic, but I do always feel good about the photographs that I share, even if I wish I’d done something differently I am always happy that I got a result and gained some experience in the process.

Dragonfly-Watching-Sunset-518x650

Of course, it can be pretty obvious why people might feel this way when you think about it. After all the internet is filled with amazing photographs, just look at any of these inspirational posts on DPS and unless your one of the featured photographers you might wonder how you too could get to that level.

The simple answer is… First you have to feel good about your photography, because the instant you start doubting your own work, your work will start to suffer.

Of course that’s easier said than done, so confronted with these questions about confidence, I decided I’d take the time to come up with five little nuggets of inspiration that everyone should keep in mind. By doing so I think you will start to feel good about your photography no matter who or where you are in your journey.

Compare Yourself to Yourself Three Months Ago – Not To Art Wolfe

No matter who you are the best benchmark for improvement is yourself in the past. Take a minute and dig through your archives look back at the photos you took three months ago, a year ago, or even further.

When I do this task I’ll notice that my composition and my choice of settings continue to improve. I make smarter choices for focal points and I get better and better at picking the right exposure in camera. Whatever you do don’t compare your photography to another photographer’s work – good or bad – it’s not a fair benchmark and you won’t be helping yourself appreciate your work.

Defeat Gear Envy

Gear envy is something we all struggle with from time to time and unless you’ve been blessed with that mythical tree made of money you’re going to be doing more wanting and less buying. Don’t let the idea that a better camera, lens, accessory, gadget or what-have-you will make you a better photographer – it won’t – and worrying about it won’t help either.

Be happy with what you have and spend your time learning to get the best photos that you can out of this equipment instead of daydreaming about your dream machine – your wallet will thank you later.

Out-in-the-Backyard-520x650

Beat the Critics By Remembering Your Fans

Even if the only fans you have are your friends and family let them be your motivation to continue to produce more work and better quality work. Let them move you beyond the point your at now and push you to where you want to be. Be happy with every like they give you on Facebook or every comment they leave on your site – or even – every time your mom tells you that she got your newsletter and loved the photo of that flower that you took at her house last weekend.

Fans are why I do what I do and I still remember when my Facebook page had less than 30 likes and almost no interaction. It takes time and a lot of work to grow, but if you’re consistent, true to yourself, your fans, and always remember it’s not a race you’ll start to feel good about what you’re doing and then the rest will fall into place.

Know Why You’re Photographing

Are you taking photos because you want to pass time on the weekends, record family moments, or are you trying to make a career out of it? There many reasons why we take photos and before you can truly be happy with the results you capture you should define why you’re picking up the camera in the first place.

A-Fantasy-World-521x650

Share Your Work

And finally – this is probably the most important one – share what you do. Open yourself up to the world and let others see the what you’ve captured. Take the critiques with dignity and class and revel in the compliments from your fans and family.

If you need a stiff kick of inspiration here are some tips to help you get the confidence to share your photos I wrote for my own site a few months ago. The truth of the matter is the more you share the more you’ll improve and the more you improve the more you’ll be able to look at step number one and say – “Wow, look at how far I’ve come!”.

And that is what feeling good is all about.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Start Feeling GOOD About YOUR Photography


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Start Feeling GOOD About YOUR Photography

Posted in Photography

 

Eric Kim: What to consider when buying a camera for street photography

24 Jul

Istanbul-11-660x437.jpg

Eric Kim is one of the most prolific street photographers around, but he’s also a keen blogger. In this article, originally posted on his site back in spring, he offers some advice on how to buy a new camera for street photography. Rather than a simple buyers’ guide, though, Kim delves into the psychology of purchase decisions, citing research by psychologist Barry Schwartz which divides us into two categories – ‘maximizers’ and ‘satisficers’. Click through for a link to the full article. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Eric Kim: What to consider when buying a camera for street photography

Posted in Uncategorized