Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

17 February 2012

Common mistakes made by photography beginners

After a recent wedding shoot (early February 2012), viewing the images captured afterwards and the resulting criticism / complaints / discussions with photographers involved, I got the idea to write a brief post about the most basic mistakes every photographer can make...

Do you really know your camera well? Do you know how to shoot in different lighting conditions? Do you know the relationship between shutter, aperture (aka f-stop) and ISO that will allow you to have artistic control over DOF (depth of field)? I do not think so....


1.  See these icons on your camera's dial?
It is not for decoration. Read (and learn) from your camera manual (yes, that thick white booklet which you threw aside, when unbundling the brand-new camera from its box) what these icons stand for and use these manufacturer pre-sets to learn what photography is all about! After some time you will, hopefully, understand from these images' EXIF how the camera worked out what is an ideal combination of shutter speed, aperture and ISO setting.

My advice to you? After experimenting with the pre-sets, start thinking creatively and change the camera to another mode, such as Aperture Priority ("Av" for you Canonians, or "A" for you Nikonians) and try to improve on that automatic setting(s).


2. What is white balance?
This is the most common mistake amongst beginner photographers. What one should understand is that all light sources have a specific colour cast and the camera can "see" this BUT the camera must be configured to balance the colour to "white".

In other words, when a WB (white-balance) icon like "sun" is selected, the camera is told that it is being used in light with a blueish tint (ie, outside) and therefore it compensates by adding a bit of orange in order to achieve a white balance.  What happens if you leave the "sun" setting, goes indoors and start shooting under incandescent lights? Your images turn out orange because of the wrong WB setting!

My advice to you? Always return your WB setting to Auto after manually choosing a setting. If you shoot in RAW, your WB should remain in AUTO (never mind if you are inside or outside).

Another tip: when shooting a sunset, choose a "cloudy" WB. Why? Figure it out for yourself...
That is why you should experiment with WB settings in various light scenarios :-)


3. Exposure compensation!
There is a setting on your camera that some would call "a lazy man's control". It is the exposure compensation control (EV) on both the Canon and Nikon cameras, in which you simply move a vertical pointer with a plus / minus symbol into figures like +1, +2, or -1, -2, etc.

If you do understand the "deadly triangle", aka triangular formula, of shutter speed, aperture and ISO, an user can force a camera to brighten or darken an image. It is basically like opening or closing the window blinds (those horizontal / vertical strips). The "-" symbol will darken the image. The "+" symbol will brighten the image.

My advice to you? It also works inside, not only outside scenery. For example, lock on a bright object inside house (like a pot plant), then recompose to something else, maybe on that hairy dark dog, focus and take the shot.

Another sun-set tip: when shooting sunrises, reduce your EV to -2 to deepen your exposure. If the sun goes down, increase it and the sun light will diminish...


4. Focus points
The wrong use (or accidental setting) of a focus point can cause lots of grief for the user by having that shot out of focus. It is those red blocks inside the viewfinder of your camera. If you activate all the focus points, the camera will always focus on the closest object even if you don't want to. If using only the centre focus point, you have more control by moving the centre point around and focus where you point it.

My advice: after a photo-session, always return all focus points to ALL points.


And lastly,
5. Composition!
It is basically framing, positioning or whatever action you would call it, to place the image you see through the view-finder to a layout you personally like.

Nothing wrong with that because everyone is creative in their own unique ways and see things different from others. But it still does not mean you can place the horizon of a sunset scene totally skew or slap-bang straight in the middle.

Use "rules of third" and move the horizon to the top or bottom third of your image. Improve your composition even more by putting the object (eg. sun) to the left or right. And if it is a macro shoot, do it closer (as well as moving the focus point of object to the left or right, upper or bottom third). Take care to look for natural lines that will lead one's eye to the object.

Remember, horizons always but always should be straight. Use your camera's viewfinder grid (or even a bubble level, if equipped) to draw lines straight.

And that is it...if you follow these basics, you will always be ready and prepared.

01 November 2011

Tree(s) Thru Times

Morning Sun Rise by Thys Visser
Summer Mist by Thys Visser
Summer Mist by Thys Visser
A classic example of how dramatic a series of photos can be, if taken at the same location, in different seasons.

26 October 2011

Stairway to Heaven



Stairway to Heaven (From my archives) by Thys Visser

(Creative) Rusted Twisted Stairs by Thys Visser
Both these images (top-most, "Stairway to Heaven", 2011) and the next one (bottom, "Rusted Twisted Stairs", 2009) are classic examples of being the same photo but different creative thoughts and post-processing. One was done with Lightroom (2011), the other with Photoshop (2009).

If one captures a scenery perfect, with the right camera settings, one can change these images over and over again, over time....when creativity thoughts spontaneously flare up, to give different impressions of the same image. In the end, one should judge an image by how one feels about it, not by what others tell you to feel about it.

Now, which processed image is better for you? And why?  ;-)

19 October 2011

Macro Photography

> ( by Thys Visser
Macro: Pencil: Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 with Kenko 36mm Extension Tube by Thys Visser
Dew Drops - IMG-1539_1024c by Thys Visser

Various examples of my macro photography...some with the awesome Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 macro lens, others coupled with the Kenko extension tubes.

27 September 2011

Cape Town Tourism - Flickr Pic of the Day

MG_800x-9741 by Thys Visser

Some times one gets a nice surprise out of the blue. Like with this one: Cape Town Tourism chose this image as their "Flickr Pic of the Day". Okay, okay, it was last year (but I did not had a personal blog up and running at that time), and besides, it still is a "lekker" feeling of recognition, even now! :-)

Cape Town Travel / Tourism blog link: (click here)

I am greatly honoured and humbled that Cape Town Tourism considered this image good enough to be mentioned on their blog site that it has motivated me to keep at it, doing what I like the most: taking breath-taking images of beautiful South Africa.

26 September 2011

Life = Cloud

MG_800x-9741 by Thys Visser

Sometimes I feel like a piece of dissipating cloud (using one of my photos as an example :-)). Getting nowhere. Dissolving. No motivation. Lack of dedication. In one's personal life and career.

But at least my life is going into the right direction, with the help of gentle winds (recent life actions, support of some colleagues, friends and family, and above all, a wonderful wife, Anneline). Life is an ever ongoing action of momentum. Nothing stops, everything in one's life push one gently forward.

All I need, occasionally, is to take a break, switch off my mind, get out there somewhere in nature, to relax, to feel the sun on my skin, the air in my hair, the fresh ground under my bare feet, breathing in the nature that is around me.

And refocus, finding that gentle wind, and riding it again, guiding my cloud into a new direction.

20 September 2011

Bumping ride!

(Creative) Twisting Lines by Thys Visser
Please endure this bumping ride with me while I am still fine-tuning this 'muse / photo' blog of mine.

If you have any issues or suggestions, feel free to mention them here.

Btw, all comments are anonymous, so don't forget to add your nick / real name, if you want  :-)

Thanks,
Thys

Welkom! :-)

(Other) Bike on a Pole by Thys Visser