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dPS Top Post-Processing Tips of 2020

30 Dec

The post dPS Top Post-Processing Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

dPS top post-processing tips of 2020

If you’re looking for a quick way to improve your photos…

…then I highly recommend you take your post-processing knowledge to the next level.

Unfortunately, learning to post-process isn’t easy – which is where these tips will come in handy!

So without further ado, here are the most popular post-processing tips of 2020:

1. 5 Things to Do to Every Photo In Lightroom to Improve Your Photos

5 Things to Do to Every Photo In Lightroom to Improve Your photos

2. Luminar vs Lightroom: Three Reasons Luminar is Better (and Two Reasons It’s Not)

Luminar vs Lightroom: Three Reasons Luminar is Better (and Two Reasons It’s Not)

3. How to Use the Photoshop Camera Raw Filter for Better Photo Editing

How to Use the Photoshop Camera Raw Filter for Better Photo Editing

4. RAW vs DNG: What’s the Difference and Why Does It Matter?

RAW vs DNG: What’s the Difference and Why Does it Matter?

5. A Beginner’s Guide to Layer Masks in Photoshop

A Beginner’s Guide to Layer Masks in Photoshop

6. Lightroom Moon Editing Tips for Awesome Moon Photos

Lightroom Moon Editing Tips for Awesome Moon Photos

7. 10 Tips for Using a Graphics Tablet for Easier Photo Editing

10 Tips for Using a Graphics Tablet for Easier Photo Editing

8. Good Crop Bad Crop – How to Crop Portraits

Good Crop Bad Crop – How to Crop Portraits

9. 8 Vital Tips To Crop Your Photos For Stronger Compositions

8 Vital Tips To Crop Your Photos For Stronger Compositions

10. Capture One 20 Review: Time to Make the Switch From Lightroom?

Capture One 20 Review: Time to Make the Switch from Lightroom?

11. How to Create a Photogram Effect With a Digital Process

How to Create a Photogram Effect with a Digital Process

12. 8 Core Lightroom Retouching Techniques to Enhance Your Photos

8 Core Lightroom Retouching Techniques to Enhance Your Photos

13. How to Convert a Photo to a Drawing in Photoshop

How to Convert a Photo to a Drawing in Photoshop

14. Mastering Noise Reduction in Lightroom: The Essential Guide

Mastering Noise Reduction in Lightroom: The Essential Guide

15. RAW Photo Editing in Lightroom: How to Make Your Photos Look Real to Life

RAW Photo Editing in Lightroom: How to Make Your Photos Look Real to Life

Conclusion

If you enjoyed these post-processing tips, then I highly recommend you check back on Thursday – which is when we reveal our final set of top tips from 2020!

Specifically, you’ll get to discover the most popular nature and wildlife photography tips of this year.

So make sure you don’t miss out!

The post dPS Top Post-Processing Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.


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dPS Top Photography Tips of 2020

30 Dec

The post dPS Top Photography Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

dPS top photography tips of 2020

Over the last few days, we’ve been featuring our top photography tips of 2020, including our best gear tips, landscape tips, and portrait tips.

Today, we’re taking a look at all dPS articles from this past year – and picking out the most popular.

So if you’re looking for a whole bunch of high-quality photography advice…

…check out our top photography tips of 2020!

1. Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Women

Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Women – Part I

2. 6 Portrait Lighting Patterns Every Photographer Should Know

6 Portrait Lighting Patterns Every Photographer Should Know

3. 5 Things to Do to Every Photo in Lightroom to Improve Your Photos

5 Things to Do to Every Photo In Lightroom to Improve Your photos

4. Understanding Depth of Field for Beginners

Understanding Depth of Field for Beginners

5. Luminar vs Lightroom: Three Reasons Luminar is Better (and Two Reasons It’s Not)

Luminar vs Lightroom: Three Reasons Luminar is Better (and Two Reasons It’s Not)

6. Beginners Tips for Night Sky and Star Photography

Beginners Tips for Night Sky and Star Photography

7. A Beginner’s Guide to Focus Stacking

A Beginner’s Guide to Focus Stacking

8. Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Men

Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Men

9. 7 Mistakes Beginner Photographers Make The Camera Can’t Be Blamed For

7 Mistakes Beginner Photographers Make The Camera Can’t Be Blamed For

10. Your Camera’s Metering System Explained

Your Camera’s Metering System Explained

11. 5 Camera Settings Every Bird Photographer Should Know

5 Camera Settings Every Bird Photographer Should Know

12. 10 Photography Projects You Can Work on From Home

10 Photography Projects You Can Work on From Home

13. 13 Tips for Improving Outdoor Portraits

13 Tips for Improving Outdoor Portraits

14. 10 Must-Use Bird Photography Camera Settings for Beginners

10 Must-Use Bird Photography Camera Settings for Beginners

15. How to Predict Dramatic Sunsets

How to Predict Dramatic Sunsets

16. 5 Reasons You Should Still Use a DSLR in 2020

5 Reasons You Should Still Use a DSLR in 2020

17. The Best Camera Settings for Portrait Photography

The Best Camera Settings for Portrait Photography

18. How to Choose the Perfect Focus Mode for Every Situation

How to Choose the Perfect Focus Mode For Every Situation

19. 6 Vital Things to Look for When Photographing Landscapes

6 Vital Things to Look for When Photographing Landscapes

20. Take Time to Practice These Three Composition Skills Around Your Home

Take Time to Practice These Three Composition Skills Around Your Home

Conclusion

I hope you enjoyed these top photography tips from 2020.

And make sure to come back tomorrow, when we reveal the best post-processing tips of the year!

The post dPS Top Photography Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.


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Nikon Z6 II vs Canon EOS R6 – which is best for you?

28 Dec

Introduction

Canon and Nikon dominated the DSLR market for around two decades but the move to mirrorless saw Sony gain a significant foothold in the full-frame space before the former ‘Big Two’ weighed in.

The second-generation full-frame mirrorless cameras from both brands are hugely capable though, so in the absence of an update from Sony, the Canon EOS R6 and Nikon Z6 II are the midrange models to beat.

But which is right for you?

Ergonomics

An extra dial on the rear edge of the camera represent the R6’s greatest divergence from Canon’s DSLR ergonomics.

For many years, the biggest distinction between Canon and Nikon was their respective approaches to ergonomics: which one you found most comfortable was probably the best way to choose between them. And, to some extent, these distinctions are carried through in their latest mirrorless models.

The Z6 II hand grip will be familiar to Nikon DSLR users, as will the positioning and function of its command dials. These tend to be very ergonomic, with the dials well placed under the thumb and forefinger. It’s a smaller camera but finds plenty of room for control points without feeling cluttered.

Canon, meanwhile, has diverged a little more from tradition. The R6’s grip is still a lot like a larger Canon DSLR (less overtly hand-shaped but providing a solid, comfortable substrate to hold onto). The R6 gains a command dial on its shoulder, in addition to the vertical dial on the back plate and the dial behind the shutter button. We’ve found this latest iteration to be an improvement on a familiar setup, and appreciate the extra flexibility it gives.

Sensors

To a great extent, the biggest difference between the two cameras is in the sensors they use. The Nikon uses a 24MP BSI CMOS chip, shared with several rivals. In this instance it has an undisclosed number of pixels devoted to providing phase-detection autofocus.

The Canon uses a 20MP sensor using the older FSI CMOS technology but using Canon’s ‘Dual Pixel’ design in which pairs of photodetectors are used at each pixel, meaning the entire sensor can be used for phase-detection autofocus, and without even the minuscule risk of glitches or artifacts that comes with dispersed phase detection layouts.

In image quality terms, there’s not a lot to choose between them. The Nikon has fractionally higher resolution capture and slightly better dynamic range (less read noise, meaning there’s more information in the very deep shadows before it’s swamped by noise). However, the difference is small enough that the Canon’s finer sharpening means its out-of-camera JPEGs end up looking similarly detailed than the Nikon’s, despite the lower resolution.

Interface/menus

Both cameras use menu systems inherited pretty directly from their DSLR forebears. This is great in terms of familiarity, but both are beginning to creak somewhat with the sheer number of menu options crammed into them. Nikon’s ‘Setup’ menu has some of the best navigation cues in the business, but other sections are just long lists of options with few hints about the logic used to order the options and insufficient indications to find your way back. Thankfully both cameras have My Menu tabs into which you can collect the options you change most often.

Both cameras offer a decent degree of customization, though not to the point where every button can be reprogrammed to access any possible function. The Nikon lets you customize its ‘i‘ quick menu, with separate choices for stills and video, but it omits the useful option to assign a focus area mode (or area mode + AF-On) to a button, which the company’s DSLRs offered. The Canon lets you do this, via the ‘Switch to registered AF func’ option, though there’s less need to do so. The Canon’s quick menu isn’t customizable but you can add a series of functions to the list accessed with the ‘M-Fn’ button, for semi-fast access.

Autofocus

Canon (top) combines face/eye detection and tracking in a single, unified AF mode. Nikon (bottom) lets you access face/eye detect as an option in two AF area modes; AF Tracking is a separate mode, accessed with a custom button.

The autofocus systems of the Z6 II and R6 are likely to be seen as revelatory to most DSLR users, and will seem like a pretty big step forward to anyone whose camera is more than a few years old. In both instances, the subject tracking performance and face and eye detection is extremely impressive.

Where they differ is how simple it is to access these capabilities. On the Nikon you need to choose whether to engage subject tracking or to use face detection, and then decide whether to limit face detection to a zone within the scene, to let you pre-select which person you wish to focus on.

On the Canon, once you’ve changed the settings so that you get to choose the initial AF position, you can just point your focus point at a subject and it’ll track it, using face and eye detection if it’s a person or just using generic subject tracking if it’s not. The whole process is easier to understand and quicker to operate.

Video

Video is one of the areas in which a distinction begins to appear, though again it’s more nuanced than simply being a case of ‘camera X is better.’

The Canon has the better-looking specification on paper: there’s a slight crop to all its video but it’ll shoot UHD 4K video in 24, 30 and 60p, whereas the Z6 II will apply a significant crop when 60p capture arrives in 2021. Using a cropped region makes it harder to find a lens that gives a wide-angle view, and gives the higher noise level of using a camera with a smaller sensor (APS-C in the case of the Z6 II’s 60p mode).

The Canon can also shoot 10-bit footage internally, giving more flexible Log footage or HDR TV-ready video. The Nikon requires an external recorder to record 10-bit data, making it less flexible. That said, there’s an extra-cost option to upgrade the Z6 II to output a 4K Raw video stream, which can be encoded as either ProRes RAW or Blackmagic Raw, but the footage is line-skipped, so it gains processing flexibility but loses some quality with regards resolution, moiré and noise.

There’s not a lot of difference in the appearance of the UHD 24, 25 and 30p footage both cameras can capture, other than the Nikon having less pronounced rolling shutter distortion of moving subjects. Neither camera is great in this regard but the Canon is visibly less good.

The latest firmware for the Canon has alleviated our original concerns about video overheating. We wouldn’t necessarily choose it if you need to shoot large amounts of stills and video back-to-back in a can’t-miss-a-moment setting, like a wedding, but for most video projects where stop/start recording is the norm, it’s no longer significantly different to its peers (so long as you turn the camera completely off between clips). Both cameras will stop internal recording after 29minutes, 59 seconds, which limits their appeal for long-run capture anyway.

Video Autofocus

What’s great to see is that both cameras behave very similarly in stills and video mode, but don’t carry too many settings over from one mode to the other. Both cameras retain separate exposure settings for stills and video, and let you define different white balance, color mode and custom button settings for the two shooting styles, if you wish. This makes jumping from stills to video and back easier, since it avoids accidentally shooting a series of Log-gamma photos or video clips with 1/200th shutter speed.

Where the Nikon has a slight edge is that its AF interface behaves in exactly the same way in stills and video modes. This means you can set an AF tracking point in advance or try to trust face detection (with the risk that the camera will re-focus if your subject looks away). On the Canon, the only way to achieve AF tracking in video is to tap the rear screen, meaning you can’t prepare for a subject’s arrival in the frame and you risk shaking the camera as you select them. The performance once the cameras are subject tracking is pretty similar.

Screens/viewfinders

There’s not much to choose between the cameras in terms of viewfinders. The Nikon has an edge on paper, but it’s not a big enough difference for us to notice in real-world usage.

Both cameras use 3.69M dot OLED viewfinders, but the Nikon’s optics mean that it gives a slightly larger 0.8x magnification from the panel, rather than the Canon’s 0.76x figure. However, while both cameras default to a high-resolution, 60 fps refresh rate, the Canon also offers a 120 fps high speed mode, which can be useful when you’re trying to follow action.

The Nikon has the better rear screen, with a 3.2″ 2.1M dot touchscreen (1024 x 680 pixels) rather than the Canon’s 3.0″ 1.62M dot panel (900 x 600 pixels). But we suspect the way the screen moves – up/down tilt for the Nikon, full-articulated for the Canon – will have more of an impact on your preference than the difference in the panels themselves.

Fans of a top-panel status LCD will prefer the Nikon, since the Canon doesn’t have one.

Features

Both cameras have been packed with just about every feature their respective maker can think to offer. Both cameras offer intervalometer functions, for instance, though only the Nikon also includes a time-lapse feature that builds a high-res movie file. In return, the Canon includes a mode to shoot high dynamic range 10-bit HEIF files for use on HDR displays, which the Nikon doesn’t.

Interestingly, neither includes a multi-shot high-res mode of the sort offered by a majority of other manufacturers. If you indulge in one of the types of photography that can benefit from such modes, you’ll have to look to Panasonic.

Both cameras can charge or operate using power over a USB-C connection. The Canon is rated as offering between 10 and 24% greater battery life than the Nikon, though frankly the larger battery used in the Sony a7 range is a safer choice if this is a major concern for your shooting. Both the Canon and Nikon offer battery grips to extend shooting times as well as provide duplicate controls.

Adapters and legacy lenses

Both the Nikon and Canon are designed to attract photographers already entrenched in the companies’ respective DSLR systems, so both are available with adapters to use existing lenses.

Nikon’s FTZ adapter doesn’t include a focus motor, which means it’ll only autofocus with AF-I, AF-S or AF-P lenses that have their own focus motor. This still allows autofocus with around 90 Nikon lenses launched since 1992. The company says a further 270 lenses can be manually focused, before you even consider third-party lenses with built-in motors.

Canon, meanwhile, offers three EF-to-RF adapters: a simple pass-through tube like Nikon’s design or more expensive variants with an additional settings control ring or built-in filter mount. Because the EF mount always used in-lens AF and aperture drive, there are fewer compatibility considerations when using existing Canon lenses.

Many users report good experiences with adapted lenses, but the sheer number of lens designs, motor types and the subtle differences between DSLR and mirrorless AF systems means there’s always scope for variability in performance. While this compatibility is nice to have, we tend to find there are image quality, AF consistency and often size advantages to using lenses designed for the new mirrorless mounts.

Conclusion

Overall, there’s something almost nostalgic about how well-matched the Canon and Nikon are. But, unlike the DSLRs of a decade ago, there’s more of a price difference between them. The Canon EOS R6 retails at an MSRP of $ 2,499 whereas the Nikon Z6 II can be purchased new for $ 1,999 (body-only in both cases).

So the R6 is substantially more expensive, but for us, the ‘it just works’ nature of its autofocus, the 10-bit stills and video capture and (nearly) full-sensor 4K/60p video make the Canon a slightly more convincing and enjoyable all-rounder, hence it getting a Gold award to the Nikon’s Silver. But the differences aren’t huge: they’re both extremely good cameras.

And whereas, ten years ago, I’d have said: ‘buy the one that fits most comfortably in your hand.’ I’m again in a position where it’s not really the cameras themselves you need to focus on most. The depth of any existing investment you have in DSLR lenses and the availability of new, native versions of the lenses you expect to use most often should be the more significant factor.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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dPS Top Photography Gear Tips of 2020

28 Dec

The post dPS Top Photography Gear Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

As a photographer, you can love gear or hate gear – but you can’t live without it!

top photography gear tips of 2020

So if you’re looking to level up your gear knowledge, check out our top photography gear tips of 2020:

1. 5 Reasons You Should Still Use a DSLR in 2020

5 Reasons You Should Still Use a DSLR in 2020

2. Tamron Announces First Mirrorless All-In-One f/2.8 Zoom

Tamron Announces First Mirrorless All-In-One f/2.8 Zoom

3. Your Guide to the Fujifilm JPG Film Simulations (with Sample Images)

Your Guide to the Fujifilm JPG Film Simulations (with Sample Images)

4. 4 Tips to Choose the Right Lens for your Photography

4 Tips to Choose the Right Lens for your Photography

5. Synology NAS – Transforming Your Workspace to be More Productive

Synology NAS – Transforming Your Workspace to be More Productive

6. Godox TT685 Thinklite TTL Flash Real-World Review

Godox TT685 Thinklite TTL Flash Real-World Review

7. 10 Tips for Using a Graphics Tablet for Easier Photo Editing

10 Tips for Using a Graphics Tablet for Easier Photo Editing

8. 9 Solutions for Common Camera Mistakes Beginners Make

9 Solutions for Common Camera Mistakes Beginners Make

9. Nikon Z8 60 MP Mirrorless Camera Rumored, Along With D850 Successor

Nikon Z8 60 MP Mirrorless Camera Rumored, Along With D850 Successor

10. Two Nikon DSLRs Will Ship Next Year (Plus New F-Mount Lenses)

Two Nikon DSLRs Will Ship Next Year (Plus New F-Mount Lenses)

11. How to Conserve your DSLR Battery When You are Running Low on Power

How to Conserve your DSLR Battery When You are Running Low on Power

12. How to Use Photography Filters for Amazing Long Exposure Landscapes

How to Use Photography Filters for Amazing Long Exposure Landscapes

13. How to Use Old Lenses with New Digital Cameras (with Bonus Video)

How to Use Old Lenses with New Digital Cameras (with Bonus Video)

14. How To Find Your Lens’ Sweet Spot: A Beginner’s Guide to Sharper Images

How To Find Your Lens’ Sweet Spot: A Beginner’s Guide to Sharper Images

15. 5 Benefits of Using Photography Filters when Taking Photos

5 Benefits of Using Photography Filters when Taking Photos

Conclusion

I hope you enjoyed our top photography gear tips from 2020.

Stay tuned for tomorrow’s article, where we reveal our top overall photography tips of the year!

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The dPS Top Landscape Photography Tips of 2020

27 Dec

The post The dPS Top Landscape Photography Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

dPS top landscape photography tips of 2020

Today, we’re featuring the most popular landscape photography tips published in 2020.

So if you want to improve your landscape photography, take a look at these helpful landscape tips:

1. Beginners Tips for Night Sky and Star Photography

Beginners Tips for Night Sky and Star Photography

2. How to Predict Dramatic Sunsets

How to Predict Dramatic Sunsets

3. 6 Vital Things to Look for When Photographing Landscapes

6 Vital Things to Look for When Photographing Landscapes

4. A Step-by-step Guide to Long Exposure Photography

Step-by-step Guide to Long Exposure Photography

5. 12 Tips to Help You Capture Stunning Landscape Photos

12 Tips to Help You Capture Stunning Landscape Photos

6. How to Photograph Long Exposures to Create Dreamy Images

How to Photograph Long Exposures to Create Dreamy Images

7. How to do Long Exposure Photography and Light Trails at Night

How to do Long Exposure Photography and Light Trails at Night

8. Important Considerations for Great Coastal Photography

Important Considerations for Great Coastal Photography

9. How to Use Photography Filters for Amazing Long Exposure Landscapes

How to Use Photography Filters for Amazing Long Exposure Landscapes

10. 5 Ways to Capture More Diverse Landscape Photos

5 Ways to Capture More Diverse Landscape Photos

11. 5 Benefits of Using Photography Filters when Taking Photos

5 Benefits of Using Photography Filters when Taking Photos

12. 6 Tips For Capturing Better Urban Landscapes

6 Tips For Capturing Better Urban Landscapes

13. 6 Tips for Photographing Amazing Light Trails at Blue Hour

6 Tips for Photographing Amazing Light Trails at Blue Hour

14. Tips for Cyber-Scouting Photo Locations So You Can Get the Best Shots

Tips for Cyber-Scouting Photo Locations So You Can Get the Best Shots

15. Photographing Stars Using a Kit Lens

Photographing Stars Using a Kit Lens

Conclusion

I hope you’ve enjoyed these landscape photography tips!

And make sure to come back tomorrow, when we’ll reveal our top photography gear tips of 2020.

The post The dPS Top Landscape Photography Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.


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Weekly Photo Challenge – Best of 2020

27 Dec

The post Weekly Photo Challenge – Best of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Sime.

Seems a bit odd to be sharing a post entitled ‘best of 2020’ but amidst all of the chaos, I’m sure there were moments that you fondly captured, or a photograph you made at some stage in 2020 that made you smile? This week, leading into the New Year, we invite you to share YOUR favourite photograph that YOU photographed in 2020.

Tag your images on social #dPSBestPhotosOf2020

Weekly Photo Challenge – Best of 2020
Searching for critters

This year, for me, I made very few images for regular clients (hotel/food images) and mostly just photographed the boys on their adventures, when we were able to leave the house etc. Special moments for me, maybe not even the best photograph or appealing to others, but special to me and that what makes it my ‘best of 2020’

Your photograph will be special to you – don’t worry about what others think! – if you’ve not shared a photograph in our challenge before, now’s your chance!

As ever, we’d love you to share your photograph in the comments on this post, or you can share them on social media and tag us, find the details and instructions below.

Great! Where do I upload my photos?

Simply upload your shot into the comments 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.

Weekly Photography Challenge – Looking Up

Share in the dPS Facebook Group

You can also share your images in the dPS Facebook group as the challenge is posted there each week as well.

The post Weekly Photo Challenge – Best of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Sime.


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DPReview TV: How set up Sony’s ‘Real-Time’ autofocus tracking

26 Dec

Did Santa leave a new Sony camera in your Christmas stocking? If so, your first step should be to enable Sony’s ‘real-time’ autofocus tracking. In this video, we show you how to set up this useful feature.

These instructions should work for the Sony a6100, a6400, a6600, RX100 VII, RX10 IV, a7R IV, a9, and a9 II.

Subscribe to our YouTube channel to get new episodes of DPReview TV every week.

  • Introduction
  • Tracking in Auto mode
  • Tracking modes
  • Animal eye-AF
  • Conclusion

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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dPS Top Portrait Photography Tips of 2020

26 Dec

The post dPS Top Portrait Photography Tips of 2020 appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

top portrait photography tips of 2020

Over the next few days, we’ll be featuring the most popular dPS articles published in 2020 – starting with portraits.

So if you’re looking to improve your portrait photography, I absolutely recommend you check out these articles from the fantastic dPS writing team!

1. Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started With Photographing Women

Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Women – Part I

2. 6 Portrait Lighting Patterns Every Photographer Should Know

6 Portrait Lighting Patterns Every Photographer Should Know

3. Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Men

Posing Guide: 21 Sample Poses to Get You Started with Photographing Men

4. 13 Tips for Improving Outdoor Portraits

13 Tips for Improving Outdoor Portraits

5. The Best Camera Settings for Portrait Photography

The Best Camera Settings for Portrait Photography

6. Dragging the Shutter for Creative Portraits

Dragging the Shutter for Creative Portraits

7. How to Create Dramatic Portraits in Your Garage

How to Create Dramatic Portraits in Your Garage

8. 10 Tips for Photographing Great Headshots

10 Tips for Photographing Great Headshots

9. Good Crop Bad Crop – How to Crop Portraits

Good Crop Bad Crop – How to Crop Portraits

10. Street Portraits vs Street Photography: What is the Difference?

Street Portraits vs Street Photography: What is the Difference?

11. 3 Lighting Setups for Photographing Headshots

3 Lighting Setups for Photographing Headshots

12. Starting with Off-Camera Flash in Photography: Techniques

Starting with Off-Camera Flash in Photography: Techniques

13. 3 Simple Ways to Create Stunning Eyes in Your Portrait Photography

3 Simple Ways to Create Stunning Eyes in Your Portrait Photography

14. 15 Quick and Easy Poses for Family Photographs

15 Quick and Easy Poses for Family Photographs

15. Tips for Finding Beautiful Portrait Light at Home

Tips for Finding Beautiful Portrait Light at Home

Conclusion

I hope you’ve enjoyed these popular portrait photography tips from 2020.

Tomorrow, we’ll be publishing the top landscape photography tips of 2020, so keep an eye out for that!

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Happy Holidays 2020 From the dPS Team

26 Dec

The post Happy Holidays 2020 From the dPS Team appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Jaymes Dempsey.

Happy Holidays from dPS

As 2020 draws to a close, we’d like to wish you all a fantastic holiday season and a joy-filled end to the year.

2020 hasn’t been easy, and it hasn’t been the year that any of us hoped for. But the light at the end of the tunnel is nearer than ever.

Here at Digital Photography School, we’d like to thank you – for being part of the dPS community, for supporting us through these difficult times, and for pursuing the marvelous adventure that is photography. We’re certainly excited to keep offering photography content in 2021, and we have some big things in store for you (so make sure to be on the lookout!).

As we approach 2021, we wish you health, happiness, and good light.

Here’s to a fulfilling holiday season and a happy New Year!

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Cropping Your Photos In-Camera and in Post-Production: A Guide

25 Dec

The post Cropping Your Photos In-Camera and in Post-Production: A Guide appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Kevin Landwer-Johan.

Cropping your photos either in-camera or during post-production helps to create more interesting compositions. Capturing a strong composition as you take a photo is always satisfying, but can be difficult. 

Learning to compose well takes time and practice. However, you can often create better compositions by carefully cropping your photos as you are editing them.

woman out standing in a field for cropping photos
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

What is cropping?

Cropping is cutting or trimming parts of your photo. This is most often done to improve the composition or to alter the aspect ratio.

In the past, cropping involved a straight edge and a blade. These days, cropping happens on the computer and is much less aggressive; you can always hit “Undo” and try again if you make a mistake.

Cropping in-camera is a common term that’s not particularly correct. Cropping means a part of a photo is cut off. This alters the aspect ratio. You cannot do this when you are composing your images; you can only do this after you’ve taken them.

In other words:

You can compose your photos to include or exclude whatever you like, but this is not really cropping.

Some purists believe cropping your photos is wrong. They maintain that the image you capture should not be altered by cutting part of it out.

Other photographers are quite happy to leave excessive space around their main subject and crop to compose a better image as they are post-processing. 

I say, “Each to their own.” My preference is to compose well, then crop well when editing if I need to.

But only if I need to.

Cropping photos always reduces the number of pixels in an image. Cutting off a lot of a photo can affect its clarity and the ability to enlarge it (compared to an image that remains full and uncropped).

studio photo of a woman
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

When is it best to crop a photo?

Beginner photographers can benefit from cropping photos for two main reasons:

First, cropping your photos well can improve a poor composition. You can rescue a photo by reducing the amount of empty space or taking out distracting elements. When you have not taken the time to compose well, or are not yet sure how to create a good composition, cropping can help draw attention to your main subject.

Second, learning to crop well will help you better understand strong composition. It’s often easier to see how to improve a photo by cropping when you are sitting at your computer than when you’re trying to remember how to set an accurate exposure in the field. 

As you sit and look at a photo you’re editing, think about how it can be improved by trimming off the top or bottom. Or maybe by bringing the left or right edges closer to your main subject. 

farm landscape cropping your photos
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

When there’s no time pressure, you can experiment with how you want your compositions to look. You can make copies of a photo and try different crops to see which one you like best.

The main rule of composition I follow is to fill the frame. If I find that I have not done this well enough when I am taking a photo, it is my first consideration when I start to crop.

Maybe there’s something in the photo I had not noticed when I was taking it. Someone may have stepped into the edge of the frame as I pressed the shutter release. Sometimes, I’ll trim an edge so my main subject lines up with one of the rule of thirds gridlines, or sits at the intersection of these lines.

studio portrait of a man for cropping your photos
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

How do you know what to crop?

Will your photo look better if you crop it? That is the most important question to answer before trimming a photo. If you think your image will look better, go ahead and crop. But be purposeful about what you do.

Consider the lines in your photo. Often, lines in a composition will be affected if you crop. Part of the digital cropping process can include rotating your image. This allows you to straighten a crooked horizon or get vertical lines in your photo looking natural.

Think about the rule of thirds. Will cropping help your photo conform to this compositional standard? It can be much easier to apply this rule during post-processing than when you are taking a photo. You can often be much more precise when editing, depending on what your subject is.

forging brass
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

Look for distracting elements. Does everything fill the frame and support the main subject of your photograph? If not, think about how you could crop these elements out. Sometimes, it might be power lines at the top of your photo. Or a power pole or a person at one edge. 

Square framing will transform the composition into something completely different. For some subjects, this will be perfect. Not many of us use square format cameras, so to achieve this look we must crop during the editing process. 

Think about cropping as you compose. Sometimes, you’ll see that a square will frame your subject better than a rectangle. Or that a wide, panoramic style will suit your subject better. I’ll often think about how I will crop an image as I am taking it if my subject does not fit the 3:2 ratio of my camera’s sensor.

white teapot square cropping photo
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

How do you crop your photo to fit a specific aspect ratio?

Sometimes, you may need to fit a photo to a specific aspect ratio, such as when you want to update your Facebook or website banner image. 

Here’s how I do that:

First, I’ll do a quick search to find the current size requirements of the place I want to use the image.

Then I’ll make a new blank canvas in Photoshop or Affinity Photo, one that matches the aspect ratio I need.

Next, I’ll drag and drop the photo I want to use onto that blank canvas.

Then I’ll resize the image and position it to appear the way I want it to look. 

When changing the aspect ratio of a photo, you need to consider how it will look and what you’ll be cropping out. Often, banner images are wider than a 3:2 camera-sensor ratio, so the top and/or bottom of the image will be sacrificed. Profile photos often need to fit a square format.

Placing your photo in a blank frame that fits the correct aspect ratio allows you to move it around within the space to see how it best fits, or if it doesn’t. 

close-up of a woman with a chocolate ice cream
© Kevin Landwer-Johan

Cropping your photos: Conclusion

Cropping your photos can help you learn to create better compositions. When taking your time to ponder an image on your computer monitor, you can often see how you could have framed the shot better.

Aim to fill your frame. Experiment with copies of your photos. Crop each copy differently to see which composition you like best.

And by repeating this process with every image you edit, you’ll soon find that you’re cropping fewer of your photos.

The post Cropping Your Photos In-Camera and in Post-Production: A Guide appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Kevin Landwer-Johan.


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