endigo said:If you later decide that the camera is just collecting dust, the upper end cameras do hold their value for several years.
foto said:I am also a beginner and got the 60D. I took some pictures outdoors and indoors. I was dissapointed with my indoor pictures. Can anyone advise me what is worth buying, maybe some dvd or book to improve my skills in taking pictures?
foto said:I am also a beginner and got the 60D. I took some pictures outdoors and indoors. I was dissapointed with my indoor pictures. Can anyone advise me what is worth buying, maybe some dvd or book to improve my skills in taking pictures?
ronderick said:However, there's one drawback: he's a Nikon shooter! That's blasephemy!![]()
neuroanatomist said:7enderbender said:I think there is something very wrong with the fact that beginners on a budget learn photography these days in a cropped format where all the standards and numbers are off.
I'm not sure this matters, except that we often use FF equivalents for comparison purposes. In the film days, 'pros' used MF cameras, and numbers were 'off' for them. Ultimately, though, the principles of composition and light are still the most important.
On a related topic, do you advocate that beginners start their post-processing the way I learned it (and probably you as well)...when 'dodge' and 'burn' weren't tools you clicked in Photoshop, but were cards and wands waved around in a darkroom?![]()
I can recommend a cheap, concise and GOOD book. "National Geographic Photographer's Field Guide". ($4.95, at least used to be). with pictures, examples etc. It is 120 pages, 4' X 8" fits into any coat pocket.K3nt said:ronderick said:However, there's one drawback: he's a Nikon shooter! That's blasephemy!![]()
I agree, that was the biggest letdown..But, seriously... Good books, easily accessible. Just the other night I needed to quickly refresh what settings I needed to use when taking a shot of the moon and it took me less than a minute and I was ready. I did a comparison to one of the 500 page-monster books I have, took me about 10 minutes to find the location and the it rambled on about a bunch of technicalities, all I wanted was a suggested shutter and aperture.
The monster-book is great in explaining the actual workings of stuff, but for quickly finding suggested settings it is not the right place.
Rocky said:I can recommend a cheap, concise and GOOD book. "National Geographic Photographer's Field Guide". ($4.95, at least used to be). with pictures, examples etc. It is 120 pages, 4' X 8" fits into any coat pocket.K3nt said:ronderick said:However, there's one drawback: he's a Nikon shooter! That's blasephemy!![]()
I agree, that was the biggest letdown..But, seriously... Good books, easily accessible. Just the other night I needed to quickly refresh what settings I needed to use when taking a shot of the moon and it took me less than a minute and I was ready. I did a comparison to one of the 500 page-monster books I have, took me about 10 minutes to find the location and the it rambled on about a bunch of technicalities, all I wanted was a suggested shutter and aperture.
The monster-book is great in explaining the actual workings of stuff, but for quickly finding suggested settings it is not the right place.
foto said:I am also a beginner and got the 60D. I took some pictures outdoors and indoors. I was dissapointed with my indoor pictures. Can anyone advise me what is worth buying, maybe some dvd or book to improve my skills in taking pictures?
These are the three key factors? How about, composition, a polarizing filter, and a small aperture?ronderick said:for example, the three key factors of landscape photography - tripod, wired release, and mirror lockup
branden said:These are the three key factors? How about, composition, a polarizing filter, and a small aperture?ronderick said:for example, the three key factors of landscape photography - tripod, wired release, and mirror lockup
distant.star said:5. Every place is walking distance if you have the time.
neuroanatomist said:distant.star said:5. Every place is walking distance if you have the time.
Hawaii?