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Shooting with available light

Catching up on some older posts I’ve been meaning to reference here. The first is a wonderful post over at DPS on Shooting with available light.

Gearworks

Sounds like a contradiction doesn’t it? In fact, shooting available light frees you from all the encumbrances of dragging strobe equipment around with its stands, modifiers, strobes and possibly even power packs. On the other hand, shooting available light chains you to whatever the light is willing to do at a given time of day. So you see now how it can free you or chain you up. There are a few tips and techniques you can use to tame available light and bend it to your will in many circumstances. Best of all, you don’t have to purchase a thing to use this technique.

I’ve shot with available light a lot, I really do enjoy it, especially playing with the manual settings to get the exact look that I am going for.

Check out the How To Shoot With Available Light post over at the DPS Blog.

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Tags: available light, DPS, light, Tips

12 Aug 08 | DPS, Tips, lighting | Read on | Comments (0)

Portrait Photography’s Power Posing - Part II: The Poses

DPS posted the sequel to Portrait Photography’s Power Posing Part I: The Components that I blogged about a little over a week ago.

Happiness

The post talks about three power poses and how to achieve them:

  1. Standing Tall: Give an air of confident ability and self-assurance.
  2. Casual Seated: Express an easygoing attitude
  3. The Wall Chill: Describes natural and casual expression

Check out the Portrait Photography’s Power Posing - Part II: The Poses post by Christina Nichole over at the DPS blog!

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Tags: chirstina nichole, DPS, Portrait, posing

05 Aug 08 | DPS, Portrait, Tips | Read on | Comments (0)

Portrait Photography’s Power Posing Part I: The Components

Great article over on the DPS Blog (when don’t they have great articles?) regarding portrait photography and posing.

Kelly

Some of the tips include positioning for head, arms, legs, hips, joints (”if it bends, bend it!”), and more!

Check out the “Portrait Photography’s Power Posing Part I: The Components” article by Christina Nichole over at the DPS blog!

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22 Jul 08 | DPS, People, Portrait, Tips | Read on | Comments (0)

10 More Tips for Stunning Portrait Photography

To follow up the 10 Ways to Take Stunning Portraits post from the other day, DPS has posted 10 more tips:

11. Frame your subject
12. Go with a wide angle
13. Play with backgrounds
14. Change the format framing
15. Hold your camera on an angle
16. Take unfocused shots
17. Introduce movement
18. Experiment with subject expressions
19. Fill the frame
20. Find an interesting subject

Seems I’ve managed a couple of these in past self-portraits, good tips for the future!

threesixtyfive : onehundrednine : mad world

Check out the 10 More Tips for Stunning Portrait Photography for more details!

threesixtyfive : oneninetyfive : funny face

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Tags: DPS, Portrait, self-portrait, Tips

11 Jul 08 | DPS, People, Portrait, Tips, self-portrait | Read on | Comments (0)

10 Ways to Take Stunning Portraits

Being part of the 365 Days/threesixtyfive self-portrait a day for a year project, I found this article over on the DPS Blog today very interesting. Always looking for different ways to shoot myself, and I’m sure this will come in handy for portrait shooting as well!

How do you take Portraits that have the ‘Wow’ factor?

Today and tomorrow I want to talk about taking Portraits that are a little out of the box. You see it’s all very well and good to have a portrait that follows all the rules - but it hit me as I was surfing on Flickr today that often the most striking portraits are those that break all the rules.

I want to look at some ways to break out of the mold and take striking portraits by breaking (or at least bending) the rules and adding a little randomness into your portrait photography.

threesixtyfive : oneeighty : hello? is there anybody in there?

In a nutshell here are the ten points from the post today:

  1. Alter your perspective
  2. Play with eye contact
  3. Break the rules of composition
  4. Experiment with lighting
  5. Move your subject out of their comfort zone
  6. Shoot candidly
  7. Introduce a prop
  8. Focus upon one body part - get up close
  9. Obscure part of your subject
  10. Take a series of shots

My favorite technique, as you can see, is playing with and experimenting with light (photo above). I also find some of my best portraits are when shot candidly - as can be seen in the two photos below.

Avalee & Mommy

Mike

Be sure to head on over to the DPS Blog and read in detail 10 Ways to Take Stunning Portraits!

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Tags: 365, DPS, People, portraits, self-portraits, threesixtyfive, Tips

09 Jul 08 | Black & White, Children, DPS, People, Portrait, Tips, self-portrait, threesixtyfive | Read on | Comments (2)

The Secret to Ultra-Sharp Photos

I really have to get back to posting every day if I can… anyways, today’s tip comes one again from the Digital Photography School Blog provided by Jim M. Goldstein.

These days digital cameras simplify not only your ability to see what you’re focusing on, but they also give you an immediate view of your photo enabling you to move on to your next photo or to try again. As great as these features are consistently getting sharp photos can still be a challenge.

Yellow

I know I’ve been frustrated a few times with the lack of sharpness - sure the Unsharpen Mask in Photoshop helps with most images, but is that the real answer?

Whether you’re using film or digital cameras the optics of lenses hasn’t changed as optics are all about math and physics. Don’t worry I don’t want to talk math or physics any more than you want to read about it, but there is a key principle that every photographer should be aware of and that is hyperfocal distance.

Sounds pretty technical!

The short and sweet tip for those using shorter focal length lenses is to focus 1/3 of the way into your photo with a smaller aperture setting to maximize your depth of field.

Note for longer focal length lenses like telephoto lenses this principle still applies, but it becomes less of a factor for most people given the types of subjects  photographed with these lenses are generally less foreground-centric.

A bit easier to swallow… anyways check out the rest of the article over at DPS - great little read, as well as links to a Depth of Field calculator and a chart you can download for use in the field!

Mike

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Tags: depth of focus, dof, DPS, jim goldstein, jim m. goldstein, sharpness, tip

02 Jul 08 | DPS, Tips | Read on | Comments (2)

Published!

Well sort of… submitted my article on HDR processing to DPS for consideration. Just found out they published it! Thanks Darren and DPS staff!

HDR Test : Final Results

If you missed it the first time around, check it out over at the DPS Blog.

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Tags: comparison, DPS, hdr, Published

18 Jun 08 | DPS, Published, hdr | Read on | Comments (0)

She’s a winner!

Over at the DPS forums, they set up “weekly” assignments… I try to do them when I remember. The last assignment was From the Hip. So I submitted on of my “Street TtV” shots…

The edge of conversation...

I was pleasantly surprised when I started receiving congratulatory comments on the image above. From the “This Week in DPS” blog post:

We finished the From the Hip assignment this week, and we weren’t at all disappointed with the interesting pictures that people managed to get without actually looking through the viewfinder! Our winner this week was Haeretik for his picture taken through the viewfinder of an old camera. According to him, “Shot this with my XT pointed down through my TtV contraption held by my waist…”.

Many thanks for the selection!

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Tags: assignment, digital photography school, DPS, Street Photography, street ttv, through the viewfinder, ttv

09 Jun 08 | Assignments, DPS, Street Photography, TTV | Read on | Comments (0)

5 Quick Tips to Keep You Motivated

Short little piece over at the Digital Photography School blog… as photographers we all get into funks or feel unmotivated from time to time… here’s 5 quick tips to keep you motivated!

  1. Go for a walk
  2. 5 in a half (take 5 photos in half a mile or kilometre)
  3. Check past DPS articles
  4. Be random on Flickr
  5. Fill in the blank - what do you do?

As for number 5, I find that playing with other peoples photos helps get things cracking again. Below is a photo that I modified for the Stop, Collaborate and Listen. group on Flickr.

SCL : 2008.05.23 : BCA

Check out the original 5 Quick Tips to Keep You Motivated post over at DPS.

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Tags: bca, bigcrustyape, collaborate and listen, digital photography school, DPS, motivation, Portrait, scl, stop, Tips

29 May 08 | Assignments, DPS, Portrait, Tips, flickr | Read on | Comments (0)

How to Geotag Images

Over on the Digital Photography School blog, there’s a new article about Geotagging images.

In this post Colin Spencer gives us a good introduction to how to Geotag images. You can see some of Colin’s images here and learn more about him at the conclusion of this article.

When I first started using flickr, I mapped some of the images I’d taken. The main issue I had with this was that my ONLINE version of a photo was tagged, my OFFLINE version wasn’t. I started geotagging my offline images a few months ago, unfortunately I don’t have a GPS device to automatically do it, but I found a cool freeware program called GeoSetter that does a wonderful job!

Abandoned v2 (Sepia)

Check out How to Geotag Images over at DPS, and check out my geotagged photos on Flickr!

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Tags: colin sepncer, digital photography school, DPS, flickr, geo tagging, geosetter, geotag, map, mapping

22 May 08 | DPS, Tips, flickr | Read on | Comments (0)
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