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Digital Photography for
Beginners: Seven Ways to Beat the Learning
Curve
Author : Kate Sheridan
Even the most
accomplished photographers who've moved into
the digital age experienced an awkward first
time, a dreaded beginner's learning curve.
You don't have to face your digital future
with fear and dread! Here are seven quick
tips to make your new photographic venture
quite painless:
1. Start
Simply
Consider an
inexpensive digital that will let you
practice techniques using basic and
automatic settings, including auto-flash and
video display. You can easily move up to
more complex models as you become more
comfortable with the technology.
2. Step Into
the Light!
One common
characteristic of digital cameras is a small
built-in flash that struggles in what you'd
usually consider adequate lighting for
decent pictures. Always automatically ask
for the maximum amount of available light
anytime you're shooting inside.
3. Get
Up-Front and Personal
Getting
closer to your subject helps shed extra
light on the subject, improves contrast and
definition, and self-edits those sometimes
bizarre background elements that can ruin a
photo.
4. Study the
Background
Poles rising
from a politician's head ... telephone wires
seeming to extend out of your loved one's
ears ... a bicycle protruding from the
bride's backside ... the potential disasters
of background "noise" are endless. Always
check before you click!
5. Digitals
Hate the Night
Just believe
it. You'll want to use a tripod if you do a
lot of night shots. Even with a "night"
setting, which most basic digital cameras
have, you're apt to get blurred photos as
the camera races against itself to manage
the dim light.
6. Move
Around
There's no
better time to experiment with perspective,
light and color than when you're starting
out. Move around your subject to test your
camera angles, your perspectives and to know
both opportunities and limitations your
digital presents.
7. Watch the
Sun and Shadows
Even using an
automatic flash adjuster, shooting into the
sun on a blazing summer's day or giving in
to your subject's natural move to shade his
eyes or face, will likely give your digital
photograph either so much light that all
contrast is obscured, or else a zebra-like
quality that detracts from the subject
itself. Practice moving up close, keeping
the sun behind you, or choose lightly shaded
areas in which to shoot human subjects
outdoors.
Kate Sheridan
is a Michigan freelance writer, photographer
and homesteader whose writings on the fun
and foibles of country living may be found
at
http://www.gardenandhearth.com/RuralLiving.htm.
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