Rob's Mostly Digital Image blog

Various image resources and thoughts

Friday, November 30, 2007

Simple things that make photos better

It's the simple things that count most in a photograph. Like simply framing your subject and choosing your lighting. OK, sometimes you don't have a choice - it's midday and you need to take a shot. But you can always move around, change angles, or use a bit of flash to fill in the dark. And for those sun-in-your-face situations you could even use the back-lighting to create a stark, silhouetted shot. That's the beauty of it - you can actually turn a difficult moment into a creative one; or a dull shot into something special.

So what are my key tips?

  1. Firstly, keep the camera close by (you never know, do you?)
  2. Always ask yourself, 'where's my subject?' and 'where's the light coming from?' Good lighting is critical to any shot and involves a bit of thought about shadows and contrast. If you can, shoot at the ends of the day. And ask 'do I need some flash here?'. Flash can 'fill-in' a dark area but can also make for a starker image. So don't use the flash unless it's really needed or gives the effect you want
  3. And then ask, 'can I get closer to my subject?'; closer is usually better than distant, unless you want a group shot or a landscape of course! Macro shots can be dramatic, as well
  4. Am I in focus? Sometimes you may want to try different focus-points to emphasise different things in your shot, remembering that depth-of-field changes with aperture, too
  5. Ask also, 'is my subject moving, or still?' (This helps you decide on shutter speed and aperture, if you are into really it, or if you need to pan your camera with the subject's movement to avoid blur.)
  6. Can I improve the shot by changing my angle or indeed moving the subject itself?
  7. Have I thought about framing? By framing carefully you get what you want in the shot - things like heads, feet, the people or landscape you want
  8. On the other hand don't forget you can crop and adjust later - so don't get hung up on the framing and freeze with your finger just over the button!
  9. Shoot lots, you can pick the ones you like later (especially so with digital cameras!)
  10. Don't be afraid to try different things, be a bit creative, and to practice, practice, practice!

Labels:

Friday, November 23, 2007

Bubbles 3 - over the top we go


When I've come so far, why stop there?

Labels:

Bubbles 2 - the rework


Of course I can never leave anything alone, I have to do something more with it...

Labels:

Playing with bubbles in my sink


Well I'll photograph anything, really... using the Nikon, all digital, a touch of flash

Labels:

blog comments powered by Disqus

-->

These posts represent my opinions only and may have little or no association with the facts as you see them. Look elsewhere, think, make up your own minds. If I quote someone else I attribute. If I recommend a web site it's because I use it myself. If an advert appears it's because I affiliate with Google and others similar in nature and usually means nothing more than that... the Internet is a wild and untamed place folks, so please tread warily. My opinions are just that and do not constitute advice or legal opinion of any sort.
All original material is copyright 2008 by myself, too, in accord with the Creative Commons licence (see below).



QuickLinks: Addicted2Wheels Autoexpo 2000 GTVeloce Automotive Gallery GTVeloce.com GTVeloce Image Library Fort Street High School Class of 75 All purpose Chatroom Userplane Chat Fortian Image Gallery 1975 Flora Gallery Miscellaneous Image Gallery Bike Racing Gallery Airliner Gallery Airline Postcard Gallery Gerry's Gallery GTVeloce rave on Alfa Romeos Alfa Gallery Automotive How-to Index Staying Alive Handling 101 Handling 102 Handling 103 Tyrepressures Camber Toe Caster Polar Moment Roll Oversteer Understeer Weight transfer Coil springs Wheels and Tyres Pitch Heel and Toe Double Declutch Offset Rollbars BMEP calculator Cornering load calculator GTVeloce Blog Offline Blog Out Out Damned Blog Addicted2Wheels Blog The Spiel on business MBA Resources HR Resources KM Reframed Bike Racing forum KlausenRussell Com-munity Chain Chatter Unofficial RBCC info Official RBCC info Unofficial CCCC info Official CCCC info Rob's Guide to Road, Crit and Track Racing Rob's Guide, part 2 Track race tips Sydney's Velodromes What do those lines mean? Automobile links Mustknow links Philosophy links Music Links Images of the Russell, Matthews, O'Brien and Brown families in Australia Rob's Amateur Art Gallery The GTVeloce GiftShop The GTVeloce Shopfront Rob Russell's images at Image Tank



Creative Commons License