Saturday, September 27, 2008

Book: Legal Handbook for Photographers

I came across a good read a few days ago and I've been going through it like my little nephew goes through carbonated beverages.  The book (as you might have figured out by the title) goes through your rights as a photographers and how to protect what you have.  The ladder is discussed more so in depth by the most recent edition which was published.

If you're ever going through some concern as to what your rights are to take, process, use, and protect your art, you need to give this a read.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Lensbaby introduces new lenses

Lensbaby just introduced three new lenses to their arsenal.  

The Muse, the Compressor, and the Control Freak.  Check them out and let me know if any of you have experience with using lensbaby products before, I'm interested to see how well images can be captured from tilt/shift focus lenses.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Tips for Shooting During the Autumn Season

Autumn is probably my favorite season out of the four we have here in the states.  Not really because I feel the best or do the most, but because I sweat a lot (the cooler weather helps maintain that) and because I feel I look best in dark layers (I have the face/body/color tone for it).  Pathetic reasons, I know.


But hey, when I'm comfortable with the crisp chill and looking good, I'm happy shooting.  Just wanted to share with everyone some tips I've complied when it comes to shooting during fall.


-Focus on backlit leaves


This is something I really like to do all the time, and not just during autumn.  The distinct shapes of each edge, curve, or wedge of the leaves start to pop out when there's that contrast between the light in the background, and the darker leave in the foreground.  You might have difficulties metering this properly because you don't want you leaves to look washed out, but you don't want highlights in the background either.  Doesn't work all the time, and you have to pick and choose you shots.  But when it does, you'll be happy with the results.


-Tell the story of the season


Some of the best series I've seen show how our environment starts to change gradually.  A series of photographs over a few weeks starting from leaf filled, luscious, vibrant areas start to fade.  They don't go down without a fight though.  Almost as if the tree puts out all her effort to show you she has something left, she'll explode with color.  But inevitably, mother nature wins out.  That trees/forrest's story deserves to be heard (better yet, seen).


-Play around with white balance


Being creative with your white-balance is one of the easiest ways to add that dimension of mood to your photographs.  You can make things cooler and expose the death of life around you, of you can warm it up to show there's still life left even after the colors fade.


-Get a little wet


Shooting near a lake or river is great, but only if you can do it well.  The reflection of the season bouncing back at you.  You might even by lucky enough to find a still pond where the leaves blanket the surface of the water, but the trees in the background are completely naked.


-Catch the wind


Slowing down the shutter to capture the motion of the wind is great for fall photos.  Take a picture of a pedestrian standing by the bus stop bundled, and see the wind blowing through their hair.  You can even take a picture of colorful leaves flying around, going which way the wind takes them.


Please feel free to ad anything else you guys think would improve everyone's light capturing ability.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Autumn






Reason for this Blog

I hope to share my photography with the world, as well as continue a constant discussion about photography in general.

Nothing specific about the medium, but everything that involves photography. Wether it be from choosing lens for a trip, experiences on having your photographers' rights violated, to the right white balance to shoot at noon on a cloudy day. Everything that has to do with photography is in the limits.