Monday, 12 November 2012

The Best Camera Is The One You Have With You (Mobile Photography TIPS)

The Best Camera Is The One You Have With You (Mobile Photography TIPS):

All photographers go through a lifecycle; those distinct stages from new photographer through to seasoned shutter bug. It definitely happened to me and, looking back, my one embarrassing stage was the camera kit snob stage. I’m not going to dwell on it, but suffice to say, it was a pretty cringeworthy stage for me personally. Now I am not too proud to miss an opportunity just because I don’t have my main camera on me.
Years ago I stumbled upon Chase Jarvis who is, I think, a massively creative photographer. He came up with a common sense mantra, the title of this article. The premise is that we should all embrace the camera we have on us and, hopefully a safe punt, that is going to be your cell/mobile phone.

If you are reading this article, chances are you don’t carry around an ageing Ericsson or Nokia from the late 90s. Personally I use iPhone, but I figured out early on with a few must-do tips, you can come up with some impressive images using just the camera in your phone.
All the images in this article were captured, hand held, with a Nokia 808 Pureview. All image editing was performed in Photoshop CS5 and, apart from black and white conversion, very basic – really, 3 minutes load through to save basic.

Shooting: Composition




Always think about the composition and what you are trying to capture. I’m willing to bet, with SLR and tripod, you put a great deal of thought into your shot, so why should it be different with your phone.

  • Rule of Thirds. Except for symmetrical compositions, like shooting down a tunnel, avoid centering subjects and horizons in the frame.



  • Reduce poor skies to the smaller portion of the frame.



  • The eye will follow leading Lines into the frame and distance. This is something you can control, like a winding road that will lead the eyes across the beautiful landscape in the frame.



  • Light is the biggest factor that will make or break a good photo. This is especially true for camera phones and their small sensors – they love the light. Early morning and late afternoon light (golden hour) will enhance everyone’s images! Try and move to compose where the light falls on your subject; faces, buildings, statues, etc.



  • Decisive moments make for strong compositions. See a great scene? Set up for the shot and then wait for something to occur. In Florence, on a recent trip, I waited on a bridge, with a great view into the distance, for… people on Segways! They’re a rare site in the UK, so I thought it would make a great juxtaposition.


  • Check out Christina Dickson’s most useful article, breaking down composition into geometric areas.

    Shooting: Steady



    As with an SLR and tripod, I always try to find a rest or surface to remain steady for the shot. Window frames, lamp posts, benches, trees, girlfriend’s head, etc. It will make such a difference to the resolving power of the pea sized lens on your phone’s camera.

    Shooting: Straight



    I do edit and publish on the move, so getting it right in shot will get the highest quality up front. Each app you use to edit shots will degrade and potentially resize your images all the more. You have a big LCD, so take a moment to line up and level before pressing the shutter.

    Editing: Color and contrast



    I don’t think twice that Photoshop will be editing this image for an SLR shot, so the same usually goes for my camera phone shots. It is rare if I do more than boost color and contrast, but it does make for a significant improvement.

    Editing: Straighten, Crop



    Someone out there always tells me if my images are not meticulously level, so I’ll recheck in Photoshop. If need be, I will crop too – too much sky, half a bird, etc.

    Editing: Sharpen, Resize



    Use your image editor to make the full size image sharp and then resize down for the internet. I will use a High Pass filter technique in Photoshop.
    Camera phone images don’t need to be terrible snaps and with these tips, equally important for compact cameras too, you can definitely open the eyes of those firmly entrenched in the ‘SLR is best’ camp!
    Want to learn more about mobile photography? Check out our iPhone Photography eBook.

    Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.



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

    The Best Camera Is The One You Have With You (Mobile Photography TIPS)

    Early Miscarriage - Chemical Pregnancy

    Early Miscarriage - Chemical Pregnancy:
    Worried Mom and Pregnancy Test

    Chemical pregnancies are hard to track. They happen early and maybe often, depending on which source you read. Many women think they've just had a late period. Though, if you're looking you can find them, like the mother who shares her story of a chemical pregnancy.
    ...
    Read Full Post

    Study Says Moms Need Two Months Sick Leave in Pregnancy

    Study Says Moms Need Two Months Sick Leave in Pregnancy:
    Smiling Newborn

    Did you laugh when you read that headline? I certainly laughed when I wrote it. I didn't laugh because I don't believe it to be true, but I laughed because I don't know anyone in the United States who can afford to do this, short of true medical emergencies with their pregnancies. The study that we're talking about here, was done in Norway, where they have excellent parental leave policies in place. This has had to have played a part in the findings, so much so that I think for my purposes, that's the bigger story - why don't we have leave in pregnancy?
    ...
    Read Full Post

    Monday, 5 November 2012

    What Makes You A Professional Photographer?

    What Makes You A Professional Photographer?:
    Seattle's Pike Place Market | Seattle, Washington | James Brandon Photography
    There are quite a few hot photography debates floating around the internet. Whether it’s HDR, watermarks, Nikon vs. Canon, Mac vs. PC, straight out of the camera vs. post processing; there’s certainly no shortage. One of the newer ones I’ve seen pop up recently is this big fuss over what makes a photographer a professional. This is a debate that I feel truly does have a black and white answer and shouldn’t be a debate at all. So let me explain and then let’s see if you agree…

    When In Doubt, Use A Dictionary

    First things first, let’s get the definition of professional and amateur and settle this debate real quick, then I’ll expound on it a bit.
    professional
    adjective
    1 [ attrib. ] of, relating to, or connected with a profession: young professional people | the professional schools of Yale and Harvard.
    2 (of a person) engaged in a specified activity as one’s main paid occupation rather than as a pastime: a professional boxer.
    amateur
    noun
    1 a person who engages in a pursuit, esp. a sport, on an unpaid basis.
    2 engaging or engaged in without payment; nonprofessional: an amateur archaeologist | amateur athletics.
    Ok, thanks for reading!
    Hehe, just kidding. But that really does settle this whole debate right? A professional photographer is someone who’s paid occupation is photography. An amateur is someone who engages in photography without payment just for the love it. So what’s wrong with that?

    Nobody Wants To Be An Amateur

    Well, almost nobody. I’ve found that most amateurs who have never been professionals want to be professionals. But many professionals miss being amateurs and the purity that came with it. When you get money and clients involved, the purity of creating art seems to get tainted to some extent, especially when you’re creating images to suit your clients needs instead of clients hiring you for your creativity and giving you freedom over the images. See the difference there? Being a professional has nothing to do with quality of work. There are amateurs that are better photographers than I am. There are amateurs that are better photographers than you are.
    There are professional photographers out there who:
    • Have been making a living for 30 years with their grip-n-grin, hand under your chin, head slightly tilted, perma-smile, muslin backdrop in a studio type images.
    • Shoot weddings and charge $800 for 6 hours in JPG mode and burn the images straight out of camera to a disk, yet they make good money because they are so cheap and shoot so many weddings.
    • Run travel photography workshops around the world with a litany of sponsors and followers. Yet their images are plagued with halos and over saturation. Good marketing can take anyone a long way.
    On the flip side, there are amateurs who:
    • Take far better images than most professionals, but just do photography for the love of it.
    • Have full time jobs and make enough money from their photography to buy new gear regularly.
    • Have full time jobs yet are more connected and intertwined in the photography community than a lot of professionals.
    • Make great money through photography but still work somewhere else to have steady income, health care, pensions, etc.
    • Take and create award winning photographs worthy of any gallery.
    • Make more money part time than some professionals make full time.
    So why is being an amazing and unbelievably talented photographer not enough? Why do we also want to be considered a professional when our work shines above (what we feel is) the rest? I think it’s just the general disconnect around the two words and the secondary meanings that they have formed over recent years. I mean, think about this:
    A teenager who goes out and races his car at a drag strip every single weekend, who lives and breathes racing, who works on his car every day after school, isn’t considered a professional. It’s his hobby, even though it takes up a very large portion of his every day life. Yet a NASCAR driver who hasn’t won a race in three years is still considered a professional race car driver. Why? Because that’s what he does for a living and he earns a paycheck for it!
    My wife loves to cook. She’s a foodie to the core. She can take just about any recipe she sees on the Food Network and recreate it and make it her own. It’s amazing. But she isn’t a professional chef is she? Yet the guy that works at the burger joint up the street and runs the kitchen is considered a (professional) chef because that’s his living and his main source of income.
    So why is photography any different? I really don’t understand…

    Conclusion

    Well, in this case, the conclusion is really up to you. Do you agree? Disagree? Voice your opinion in the comments below and let me know what you think. Or hit me up on twitter (@jamesdbrandon) and let me know there.  Be sure to use the hashtag #DPSdebate


    Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.



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

    What Makes You A Professional Photographer?

    Monday, 29 October 2012

    Second Baby Showers Are Tacky

    Second Baby Showers Are Tacky:
    The question of the second baby shower is one that doesn't go away.  Some readers are very blah in how they feel about, while others have very strong feelings.  CC is one of those posters:
    ...
    Read Full Post

    Monday, 15 October 2012

    Men and Pregnancy Loss

    Men and Pregnancy Loss:
    So much time and attention is given to mothers after a pregnancy loss, but men suffer too.  Here's what one dad had to say:

    "What greatness might the future have held for you and your baby? The overwhelming sense of loss of the unknown can eat away at your psyche, as easily as termites eat through wood, leaving behind a fragile shell, with all of your future plans taken away, leaving nothing but a vacuous void. The loss of what might have been can be as great as any pain you have ever felt. In the shadow of such pain and loss, how can anything you say or do possibly make you partner's grief any less?"
    ...
    Read Full Post

    Tuesday, 9 October 2012

    How to Read and Use Histograms

    How to Read and Use Histograms:
    A Guest Post by Darlene Hildebrandt.
    The histogram is a useful but often misunderstood tool your camera provides to help you get the correct exposure on your images.  In this article I’m going we’re going to look at how to read it, and use it to your advantage to help you do just that.  Getting the best exposure (there is not such thing as the “correct” exposure, as it’s all subjective, we’ll talk about this more later) in camera should be your goal every time you click the shutter. Using these tips should help you increase your success rate.

    What is a histogram anyway?

    Dictionary definition:   A bar graph of a frequency distribution in which the widths of the bars are proportional to the classes into which the variable has been divided and the heights of the bars are proportional to the class frequencies.
    HUH?!  Anyone else confused?  But what does it do?  How do you read it? Let’s have a look!

    How to read the histogram

    A histogram is a graphical representation of the pixels exposed in your image.  The left side of the graph represents the blacks or shadows, the right side represents the highlights or bright areas, and the middle section is mid-tones (middle or 18% grey).  How high the peaks reach represent the number of pixels in that particular tone.  Each tone from 0-255 (o being black and 255 being white) is one pixel wide on the graph, so imagine the histogram as a bar graph all squished together with no spaces between each bar.  Have a look at the diagrams below:


    What can we learn from this histogram?

    There are many things we can learn about an image just by looking at the histogram.
    We can tell an image is well exposed if it reaches fully from edge to edge without a space on one side of the graph, and isn’t heavily going up one side or the other.  In an ideal world, it should just touch the left and right edges, and not spill up the sides, with a nice arch up in the center.  However that doesn’t always apply in every situation, for every scene.  Here’s a few examples:

    This is how an ideal histogram might look, evenly distributed, edge to edge, not up the sides

    This is a histogram for a dark subject, it is not wrong it is just more shifted to the right to represent the tones of the subject. This might be a black cat on the dark pavement.

    This is a histogram for a light subject (white cat) with mostly light tones in the scene and few dark areas. See how it is shifted to the right now versus the dark subject. This is correct. If you change your exposure on this to make it in the middle you will have grey cat and not a white one.

    When the histogram tells you to adjust your exposure

    Gaps on either end indicate you are missing information and your exposure can be shifted safely without losing detail.   When your graph is shifted too far in one direction or the other so that it does not even touch the other edge – that means you can safely shift your exposure to cover more of the range of tones.  Let’s look!

    This graph shows an overexposed image, notice the gap on the left side indicating a lack of any blacks represented. It also means you will lose lots of detail in the white areas that may not be recoverable. In this case shift to give your image less exposure and shoot the scene again.

    This one shows the opposite. Now we see a gap on the right side of the graph indicating there are no whites represented so the image will be dark, too dark. You can safely give the image more exposure until you see the graph just touch the right edge of the graph.

    What do the spikes up the sides mean?

    Spikes up the left or right edge indicate “clipping” of that tone, and loss of detail in that area.  Clipped areas are often unrecoverable, especially in the highlight area but it is generally advised to expose so you your graph just touches the right edge and keep your highlight details.  It is usually easier to recover some shadow detail and retain a decent image, than try and create highlight detail that isn’t there on the file.
    In some scenes, however, it may not be possible to keep the graph within an acceptable range.   For example, if you are photographing a scene with extreme contrasts such as:  a sunset; bright sunlight and deep shadows; or an inside a building where you show outside the windows as well.  In all of those cases you will not be able to keep from clipping either your blacks, or whites, or even both.

    High contrast graph
    This graph shows an image with extreme contrast, lots of blacks, a spike of white and not much in the middle.
    Is it wrong?  Can you correct for it?
    No it’s not wrong.  You can’t really “correct” for it but you do have a decision to make when you see something like this.  Do you shift the graph left and maintain highlight detail, or shift it right and keep shadow detail?
    This is no right or wrong here, it’s how you interpret the scene before you.  If in doubt, shoot both and decide later.  The graph above comes from the image below, so as you can see it is not the incorrect exposure at all.
    There are no mid-tones in this scene.

    Here’s another example of a scene that will potentially go off the graph on both ends.

    Notice the skylight at the top of the roof is blown out, and the deep shadows have little detail.

    Notice in this image the details have been retained in both areas.
    Using advanced techniques like image merge/blend, HDR  and processing in Lightroom 4 (or PS CS6) you can compress the contrast range of the scene to fit within the histogram and therefore have details in all areas.
    In the image above, I’ve used 4 bracketed images (taken 2 stops apart), and the HDR tone mapping process to bring the dynamic range of the scene down within printable range.

    One more handy thing on your camera – the “blinkies”

    To help you establish how far to go in the image brightening direction, most SLR cameras have a setting called “highlight warning”.  It will make any overexposed highlights “flash” or blink when you preview your images on your camera screen.  Many people affectionately call this, “the blinkies”.

    Notice the flashing areas, that means the highlights are being clipped wherever it is flashing.
    To do this on a Nikon, preview an image and press the Up or Down buttons (near the OK button) until you see the highlights flashing or outlined.  This is the “highlight mode”.  If you choose this setting, the camera will remember your setting for the next image you preview.   You may need to activate this feature “highlight warnings” in your settings menu first.
    To do this with a Canon press “Display” or “Info” button (depends on your model), until they show up on the screen when previewing images.   You also may need to turn on this feature in the menu settings.  Check your camera’s manual if you aren’t sure where to find it.

    Summary

    By using the tools your camera provides for you, it is easier to see how to adjust your image exposure.  There is a lot more to know about the histogram, and you can use it when you process your images in Photoshop or Lightroom as well.  Keep in mind that if you shoot JPG format, nailing the exposure in camera is even more critical.  If you shoot RAW format you have some leeway to make adjustments later, but it’s still a better idea to get it right in the first place.  If you are still on the fence about shooting RAW perhaps this article (tongue in cheek name) will help you decide:  ”Why shooting raw sucks, shoot jpg!”
    Darlene Hildebrandt is a professional photographer and educator who teaches aspiring amateurs, hobbyists and pros how to improve their photography skills through online photography tutoring, classes, and photography travel tours.  Darlene has written the ebook 10 Challenges To Improve Your Photography which you can find as a resource on her website.  She can also be found on Twitter at @ProPhotoTutor

    .


    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 to Read and Use Histograms

    30 Cute and Trendy Kids Clothing Fashion Photography

    30 Cute and Trendy Kids Clothing Fashion Photography:

    Today for your inspiration we have gathered, adorable kids clothing fashion photos. Photographing children is always fun because they are always having natural expressions and looks, which makes each photo unique and adoring. However, photographing children is a challenging as well as need to find suitable cloths for them and coupe with their mood veriations but it is full of fun and joy. Though it is not easy to teach them how to pose? but their natural poses can give you adorable and stunning shots. Here are 30 Cute and Trendy Kids Clothing Fashion Photography Photography, for your Inspiration.