"We Are The New Vintage"
Tags:
Bill-E-Bob
The actual act of taking a picture is very easy, any proficient photographer can teach you about f/stops, ISO, shutter speed, basic lighting in about 8-10 hours.
The equipment isn't really an issue either. Most point and shoots take great pictures. At best equipment allows you to more easily do things but it doesn't necessarily allow you to do better things.
So what I'm saying is don't worry about the technical aspect of photography.
What you should be trying to master is composition. The skill of taking all the various components of a photograph and harmoniously arranging them to a whole.
That's what seperate a mediocre picture from a great picture.
One of the best guide on composition for a beginner is the US Navy manual entitled "Basic Photography Techniques". Located here http://photoinf.com/General/NAVY/Photographic_composition_Balance.htm Read it, do the exercises and you've saved yourself from going to photography school.
Along with the manual, develop a habit of studying images you like, and not just photographs but other types of visual art. Really study them, break them down to their various components, look at how all the pieces are arranged, how the images is lighted. And then try to replicate them
Many photographers will say, "Hey, I don't need rules...I break them." What these people forget is that you've got to know the rules before you can break them.
Also I would caution you from falling into a very common trap. Photographers often think that some new technique like cross processing, extreme contrast, extreme saturation, HDR, tilt-shift, and lomography can substitute for good photographic skill. A good picture is a good picture and it doesn't need tricks.
But the best advice I can give you is to find someone you trust and have them ruthlessly and honestly critique your pictures.
Good luck
richardwangphotography
Holy friggin awesome link, killer one Richard! And thank you for the concise writeup as well. Good thoughts in there.
richardwangphotography said:Bill-E-Bob
The actual act of taking a picture is very easy, any proficient photographer can teach you about f/stops, ISO, shutter speed, basic lighting in about 8-10 hours.
The equipment isn't really an issue either. Most point and shoots take great pictures. At best equipment allows you to more easily do things but it doesn't necessarily allow you to do better things.
So what I'm saying is don't worry about the technical aspect of photography.
What you should be trying to master is composition. The skill of taking all the various components of a photograph and harmoniously arranging them to a whole.
That's what seperate a mediocre picture from a great picture.
One of the best guide on composition for a beginner is the US Navy manual entitled "Basic Photography Techniques". Located here http://photoinf.com/General/NAVY/Photographic_composition_Balance.htm Read it, do the exercises and you've saved yourself from going to photography school.
Along with the manual, develop a habit of studying images you like, and not just photographs but other types of visual art. Really study them, break them down to their various components, look at how all the pieces are arranged, how the images is lighted. And then try to replicate them
Many photographers will say, "Hey, I don't need rules...I break them." What these people forget is that you've got to know the rules before you can break them.
Also I would caution you from falling into a very common trap. Photographers often think that some new technique like cross processing, extreme contrast, extreme saturation, HDR, tilt-shift, and lomography can substitute for good photographic skill. A good picture is a good picture and it doesn't need tricks.
But the best advice I can give you is to find someone you trust and have them ruthlessly and honestly critique your pictures.
Good luck
richardwangphotography
This economy sucks so f**** bad, nobody gives a s*** about how good a photo you can take. They can't afford it and don't want to pay you for your time or what you are worth.
The majority of people you run into have no clue what it takes to produce real top notch photos. You will knock on thousands of doors and get only one "maybe we will call you". Then you get people who are loaded with money, but don't want to spend s*** for your stuff because they are cheap.
If I was a smarter person, I would have taken something completely different in college. In fact, I plan on going back to college....again...and try to find something that will make enough money for myself and wife and kids.
Do you realize how much money it really takes to produce some shoots. Most people don't. They don't realize the cost of travel and all the expenses involved with it, gas, food, lodging, plane tickets, car rentals, insurance, equipment, equipment repair, equipment rental, upgrades, software, computers, printing, postage and finally your time. You have to run everything as a business. Time management, figure the cost vs the time to produce.
I have had some lucky breaks and opportunities, but that only goes so far. I went to the LA area the other day and looked into some things as far as commercial automotive photography is concerned ( my field of expertise). Im a very small fish in the pond....come to think of it I realized I'm plankton floating in the ocean compared to some of the heavy hitters who get paid 50,000 dollars a session just to turn their lights on!
Just recently a multi-multi million dollar company wanted to use one of my photos in a calendar which they plan to print 400,000 copies of. Guess what? They would not pay me the measly 400 dollar asking price for the use of my photo. Instead they offered me what amounted to magic beans. They offered me "credit". "We will put your name in the credits". We really, really want to use that photo, but want it for free.
Wow! really? You'll give me credit in the calendar? I wonder if I can give a copy of the calendar to my landlord when rent comes due?
© 2024 Created by PL Team. Powered by
ABOUT | WHY YOU'LL ♥ PL | INFO / QUICK LINKS |
"We are the new vintage. Uniting the
|
|
|