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Posts Tagged ‘Weekly’

Weekly Photography Challenge – Pet Photography

26 Apr

By Jamie Grant

Last couple of weeks have been all about nature and the outdoors. Another part of nature is the animal kingdom. So this week’s photography challenge is to get out and photograph some pets. If you don’t have any borrow your friend’s or neighbours.

Photographing animals presents a unique set of challenges. You have a moving, possibly unwilling subject to deal with – as well as potentially tricky exposure to try and get detail in fur or feathers. Just the right light is essential, as is a delicate hand at working with your furry (or feathered, or scaled) friends.

Let’s see how creative you can get. Here’s a few ideas to get you started:

By Corrado Alisonno

By Sonny Annesley

By Sergiu Bacioiu

By Viola’s visions ????

By Sergiu Bacioiu

By Rafael Acorsi

By Paulo Brandao

By Tambako The Jaguar

By Charlie Stinchcomb

By Adam Foster

Share your pet photos!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

Need help? How about some articles on pet photography like these:

  • Top 10 Pet Photography Tips and Techniques
  • How to get the “Money Shot” in Pet Photography
  • 5 Adorable Pet Photos [and How to Make your Shots even Cuter]

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Weekly Photography Challenge Waterfalls

19 Apr

Earlier today I shared a collection of waterfall photographs to get your weekend going, and earlier this week we launched our latest dPS eBook  – Loving Landscapes A guide to landscape photography workflow and post-production. So in keep with the theme of landscape and nature photography the weekly photography challenge will be waterfalls.

By paul bica

Even if you live in the city you can probably find some manmade waterfalls or fountains nearby. Think outside the box. Is there a park with a stream? Perhaps a babbling brook? Do some digging and find some running water and go photograph it. It need not be a full on waterfall, use a fountain if you have to. The principals are the same.

The main concern when photographing a waterfall is how to capture the moving water. You basically have two approaches to choose from: freeze it, or blur it. Freezing the water will give a motionless effect, with water droplets suspended in mid air. Blurring it can have a dreamy, foggy look and a totally different feeling. Neither is right or wrong, they just produce different results. So choose one and see what happens, or better yet, do a variety. You may be surprised with the results and which ones you prefer.

Here are a few examples to give you ideas:

By Kerry Sanders

By Joe Parks

By Centurion

By zev

By blmiers2

By Peter Roome

By thomas brown

By Alex Shamis

Share your waterfall images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

Need help? How about some articles on nature and waterfall photography like these:

  • 4 Tips for Shooting Drop Dead Gorgeous Waterfalls
  • 3 Tips for Creating Dramatic Images using Motion
  • Picking A Waterfall Shutter Speed For The Best Look
  • Waterfall Digital Photography

Check ou the newest dPS ebook – Loving Landscapes A guide to landscape photography workflow and post-production – a brand new dPS ebook by the authors of Living Landscapes

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The dPS Weekly Photography Challenge – Going Buggy

12 Apr

Last week’s challenge featured landscape photography. In keeping with the theme of getting outside, this week we’re going to focus (pun intended) on the smaller creatures in Mother Nature’s world – the bugs.

Here’s a few images to inspire you for the weekly photography challenge – bugs!

Photograph The Katydid by Steve Passlow on 500px

The Katydid by Steve Passlow on 500px

Photograph Next to you... by Yvonne Späne on 500px

Next to you… by Yvonne Späne on 500px

Photograph yummy :P by bug eye :) on 500px

yummy :P by bug eye :) on 500px

Photograph Locust by Matteo Senesi on 500px

Locust by Matteo Senesi on 500px

Photograph Spider by Thomas Forysiak on 500px

Spider by Thomas Forysiak on 500px

By Rovanto

By Vinoth Chandar

Share your Going Buggy images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

Need help? How about some articles on macro photography like these:

  • 6 Tips for Near-Macro Photography with a Telephoto Lens
  • Reverse Lens Macro: Close Up Photography Lesson #3
  • Macro Photography for Beginners – Part 1
  • Macro Photography for Beginners – Part 2

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Weekly Photography Challenge Landscapes

05 Apr

Yesterday I shared a collection of stunning landscape images and asked a question at the end of the list. If you missed it, you can see the collection and my question here.

By Eric Bryan

If you haven’t figured out the three things that I think make all, or most of those images a cut above – let me help you out:

  1. The light – having the right light in landscape photography is crucial to creating an image that is better than good, it’s great. Light is everything and what landscape photographers drool over when they find the “good light” or they wait hours and hours, or sometimes even days to get it.
  2. Simplicity – look at many of the images in the collection again. See how some have very few elements in the image? More is less. Keep things simple and draw the viewers attention.
  3. Going the extra mile – getting off the main road and beaten track is another key to great landscape photography. Anyone can stop at the “viewpoints” along the highway and get the same shot. But if you really want to take it up a notch it’s being willing to hike into the back country and camp overnight just to get a shot of the sunrise in a remote location. Or even getting up for sunrise in the first place (see not on light above again). Are you willing to stand in the creek and get wet if it’s going to add more drama to your image, or climb a mountain, or freeze your butt off in the cold? Those are the things that the best landscape photographers do that most of us don’t and therefore they get the images we all wish we had.

Now it’s your turn! The weekly photography challenge is of course, landscape photography. 

Here’s a few more example which exhibit some of those qualities:

By Trey Ratcliff

Camped overnight on the great wall – go read the full story about this image on Trey’s blog (linked to from the image on Flickr)

By skoeber

By James Jordan

By Yasin Hassan – ????? ???

By Eleder Jimenez Hermoso

By Trey Ratcliff

Willing to risk life and limb on a rickety, questionable boat/raft on a river in China, in the pitch black darkness, to get this shot above. To read the story of the making of the image – click the image to go to Flickr.

Share your landscape masterpiece images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

And don’t forget to share the story of your image as well. Did you do #3 above and go the extra mile? Tell us about it!

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Weekly Photography Challenge – Flora

29 Mar

Earlier today I shared a collection of spring flower photos to brighten your weekend. So can you guess what this week’s photography challenge is?  You got it – flora!

But I want you to get creative with it. Think outside the box and do something different. 

  • Try some macro flower shots
  • Read about How to Photograph Flowers or get some tips on improving your flower photos
  • Shoot some wild flowers if they’re blooming in your area
  • Use some dramatic backlighting for effect
  • Seek out and find some bold colors and use them in your composition
  • Try a shallow depth of field, or focus stacking to get a wider focus range.
  • Shoot some using a slower shutter speed to add some motion
  • Convert some to black and white
  • Put them in reflection
  • Try out hand coloring in Lightroom
  • Using a flashlight or flash and paint with light at night or in a dark room
  • Shoot one flower
  • Shoot a whole bunch of them or a field full

By Paul Reynolds

By Flower’s.Lover

By greg

By Louish Pixel

By @Doug88888

By Deborah & Kevin

By Srdjan Stojiljkovic

Getting some ideas?

Share your floral images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

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Weekly Photography Challenge Sunset Photography

22 Mar

Earlier today I shared some stunning, and colorful sunset images, including one of my own from my recent photo tour to Nicaragua. Even if you can’t get to exotic locations like that, I have a few tips for you to help you take better sunset photos. Then off you go as sunset photography is this week’s photography challenge.

Group from my photo tour to Nicaragua getting ready to shoot some fire spinning on the beach. I turned around and shot them against the last bit of light in the sky.

Group from my photo tour to Nicaragua getting ready to shoot some fire spinning on the beach. I turned around and shot them against the last bit of light in the sky.

Sunset photography tips:

I give these in my travel class, they are easy to do and make such a dramatic difference in coming back with a boring sunset versus one that has your friends drooling.

  1. Put something in front of the sunset – just a gorgeous sky at sunset is not enough to make a great photo. It needs something of interest, a focal point. So basically the sunset becomes a stunning background for something. Ideally pick something with a recognizable shape such as: a tree, a person, birds, animals, a city skyline, etc. Just make sure the outline is clean and doesn’t overlap something else, watch for people standing together that look like one person with three legs, horizon going right through a person’s head, and so on – in a silhouette they will all blend together and be a messy blob. Lastly, focus on the item, NOT the sky!
  2. Wait (or hope) for some clouds – sunsets with clouds can be even more incredible as the colors move and shift across the sky, almost as if they are alive. Keep shooting until it’s dark, use every bit of light there is and see how the colors change over the whole time period.
  3. Expose for the sky, meaning underexpose according to your camera’s meter – often when you shoot a sunset your camera’s meter will read the light and try to make it brighter. But if you want more vibrant and saturated colors, and to create a silhouette of the lovely subject you’ve placed in front of the sky – you will need to override the camera and tell it to under expose, or make it darker. This is subjective so you might want to bracket your exposures when shooting and choose the best ones later.
  4. Adjust your White Balance – using Auto White Balance most of the time will give you a decent result. For sunsets if you really want to bring out the color though, try switching to one of the presets that adds warmth such as Shade or Cloudy. If you have K as an option play with the entire scale – shoot one image at 2500K and another at 10,000K and see which works best for that scene.

By Theophilos Papadopoulos

By RayMorris1

By Jeff S. PhotoArt

By Bo Nielsen

By Milivoj Sherrington

By esther**

By Angela Sevin

For some articles that might help with this challenge, see these:

  • 12 Tips for Photographing Stunning Sunsets
  • Using Sun Flares and Starbursts to Create Stunning Images
  • Do you pack up and leave after sunset and miss the fun of night photography?
  • Getting Great Portraits At Sunset
  • How to Use a 10-stop ND Filter to Take Long Exposure Sunset Images

Share your sunset images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

 

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Weekly Photography Challenge – Up in the Air

15 Mar

Earlier I shared some images of Identified Flying Objects. People or things that have become airborne is our theme this week for the weekly photography challenge as well.

Weekly Photography Challenge – Up in the Air

Surely you can find something in your area that gets some height, that you can go photograph. Be it:

  • airplanes (real jumbo jets, remote control, or paper ones)
  • balloons (hot air or helium)
  • people (skydivers, skateboarders, parasailers, etc.)
  • dogs, cats, or horses jumping
  • birds, bats or insects flying

Get out and photograph something in the air. How you go about it is up to you. Photograph from the ground looking up? Get up there with them (be safe). Or climb a mountain or get on a rooftop and look down. Get creative with it.

Here are a few ideas:

By Difusa

By carterse

By JD Hancock

By Ford in Europe

By Zach Stern

For some articles that might help with this challenge, see these:

  • An Introduction to Bird photography
  • 10 Bird Photography Tips for Beginners
  • 8 Tips For Photographing Birds
  • Mastering Panning – Photographing Moving Subjects

Share your Up in the Air images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

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Weekly Photography Challenge – Fast Cars

08 Mar

Now that I have your attention you might be able to guess what this week’s photograph challenge is right?

Weekly photography challenge – fast cars!

You may be thinking, “I don’t live near a race track”, so I’m way ahead of you. Just to clarify this challenge a little, the goal is to make the cars look like they are going fast. They don’t actually have to be doing so!

How to add motion

So how do you add motion to your car images? One way is panning. Another is to shoot from inside a moving car – just please make sure you are NOT the driver! Safety first. Here’s some tips if you need a hand:

  • Showing Speed: Using Panning When Shooting Action
  • 13 Places to Practice Taking Beautiful Motion Blur Shots
  • Mastering Panning – Photographing Moving Subjects
  • 3 Tips for Creating Dramatic Images using Motion

By Takashi Hososhima

By Brian Gaid

By Jim Sher

Share your fast car images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

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Weekly Photography Challenge – What Floats Your Boat?

01 Mar

Earlier today I shared some fabulous images of boats – all sizes, types, and colours.

Now it’s your turn. Show us your best boat images for the weekly photography challenge. Even if you don’t live near the ocean or large body of water, try something creative. What about a toy boat in the bathtub?

Winter got you snowed in? How about the antique store where they have boats in bottles!

Think outside the box . . . or bottle, and show us your boats! Here’s couple more images to get you started. The first two are even my own images, just to show you I can do challenges too!

By Darlene Hildebrandt (yup my image)

By Darlene Hildebrandt

By Moyan Brenn

By Adrian Berg

By Steve Wall

By Alan Bruce

By mjtmail (tiggy)

Share your boat images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

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Weekly Photography Challenge – Winter Sports

22 Feb

If you guessed by the post earlier today of images of winter sports that the challenge this week would be the same – you’re right!

This week’s photography challenge is – winter sports!

Here’s a few more images of winter sports to get you inspired to get out into that cold and go shoot something. Don’t worry I’ll also give you some links to articles that will help you prepare for shooting outdoors in the cold.

By kmichiels

By der Knut

By Jen Rossey

By Shay Haas

By Sangudo

By Visit Greenland

Share your winter sports images!

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) 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.

Tips for shooting in inclement weather:

  • Winter Photography Tips | Bendy straws and Ziploc bags?
  • Tips to Protect your Gear in Harsh Weather Conditions
  • How to Protect your Camera in Extreme Conditions

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