Monday, March 31, 2014

Lessons Learned the Hard Way: Photography

6 photography lessons learned the hard way | Wynn Anne's Meanderings

I shared this picture a couple of weeks ago -- but I almost didn't. Why? Because it's actually an example of a lesson learned the hard way. It's a white out: the snow is so bright that it is basically pure white, with no texture or shade. Let me tell you the lesson I learned that day (and need to keep on learning), when it comes to photography.


1. Read the manual.

6 photography lessons learned the hard way | Wynn Anne's Meanderings

This is especially important if you decide to start using a DSLR (digital single-lens reflex) camera. They are really powerful tools, but there is so much to learn, even if you've used a regular film camera before, that you should be using that manual until it becomes dog-eared. For many weeks, I carried the manual around with me. I kept it in my camera bag.

2. Take a course.

The manual alone is not enough. I studied photography in college, so had some background, but digital photography added new complexity and potential. I started with a free online course that went over the basics of aperture, shutter speed, composition and so on. Then I took an in-class course on my specific camera - a one-day overview with shortcuts and tips. More recently, I took an online class in "the art of seeing" which stimulated the more artistic side of photography, rather than the mechanical. I'm thinking of taking a course in flash photography next.

3. Check your camera settings.


6 photography lessons learned the hard way | Wynn Anne's Meanderings
It looks like the dog and man are levitating. :(
Check your settings every. Single. Time. Even if you usually use "Auto" -- check to make sure it hasn't been bumped from that to one of the fancy settings. In the above photo, I forgot to check my aperture (f-stop) -- it was set to 1.8. It's a setting I use when I'm shooting in low light, to make sure I get all the details. In this case, however, it took a picture that was already bright and made it just bizarre. And even shooting in raw, there was nothing I could do in Photoshop to rescue those pixels.

4. Know that happy accidents happen.

6 photography lessons learned the hard way | Wynn Anne's Meanderings
Sullivan, a big, friendly giant.
In the picture at the top of this post, I had the camera set to compensate the exposure by reading more light. Consequently, it overexposed the picture. Instead of the picture I had wanted, it became a study in contrast, shape, and line. It shows that sometimes the picture you get isn't the picture you wanted, but it can still be beautiful. In today's shoot, the bleached-out background helped isolate the subject. (I was just lucky that the texture on the dog's ruff didn't get lost.)

5. Focus on the obvious.


Photo by Lucy Snowe Photography. Found here
A couple of weeks ago, a photographer friend of mine shared the above photo on Pinterest. I love the picture - the colour, the tone, the light . . . but the point of focus bugs me. Why would I want to focus on the tops of the rails? If the rails are the real subject, then I would want to focus where her hands are.

But the pinner was a photographer I deeply admire, who took my favourite family portraits in Colorado, and who taught one of the online courses I took. (See her work here. Also, her blog is one of the sites on my "recommended reading" in the right frame.) So I asked her about it, and she replied:
"Wynn, I totally agree!!!! I almost didn't pin it because it disturbed me and I didn't know if it worked. But I kept wanting to come back to it and look at it. There's something about breaking some photographic rules that's intriguing. It felt like a fresh take on the subject, like there's something about the ENTRANCE to the pool that's wanting to tell a story." [Emphasis mine.]
So the lesson learned here is, unless there is a very good reason to focus on something other than the obvious, or you want to discomfit your viewer, keep the focus in the logical place. (On the other hand, maybe this picture is one of those happy accidents -- it wasn't what the artist intended, but even she realized that there was something about the picture that made it captivating?)

6. Stretch yourself.

6 photography lessons learned the hard way | Wynn Anne's Meanderings
Capturing animals in motion requires a fast shutter speed. (Also note that I got the snow's texture this time.)
For the first year of my rediscovered enthusiasm for photography, I focused on macro shots and portraits. It wasn't until we got Scooter that I really started looking at more landscape photography. Then, with Kane, I've been working on photographing dogs.

Photographing animals is a real challenge for me because, with rare exceptions, they don't sit still. They don't pose. You have to really know your camera and know your settings in order to get a good picture.

I am optimistic that my experience with dogs will make it easier for me to photograph my future grandchildren.

That's it for today. I'm sure I will come up with more for another post. Do you have any tips to share?

14 comments:

  1. Haha, you said what I was thinking- photographing dogs has to be about as difficult as photographing children!
    "Check your camera settings" is my biggest mistake. I hate it when I take a really cute picture only to find it's way overexposed. And you're right, there's nothing you can do to fix a photo where everything is white.

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    1. I keep trying the shutter-speed-controlled option (rather than aperture-fixed), but feel I don't get the results that I would like. I need to keep trying.

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  2. Wonderful tips! I liked your dog photo and the swimmer too, both interesting and both awesome accidents!

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    1. Thank you -- let's hear it for happy accidents!

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  3. Great stuff! I'm taking a photography course right now, and you're right, just the manual isn't enough. It's very early days for me, and I find I'm so slow setting up the right light etc. Still struggle with back-lit, and bright snow. btw, I loved the snow/bench photo.

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    1. Thanks! Is this one step closer to your starting a blog?

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  4. I'm relying on your expertise to catch all of the best children photos!

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  5. I need to get more acquainted with my camera manual!!

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    1. It's boring as heck, but it helps if you have a specific photography exercise or challenge in mind. Then get out the manual and look up how to do it.

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  6. I just got my big girl camera at Christmas, so I am hardly ever out of Auto mode at this point. And with this long Canadian winter, all I have had to photograph it seems Is Snow. lots of snow. But I am slowly learning things. So sadly, I don't really have any tips to share -- I am too busy soaking up all the tips I can find like a little shutterbug sponge.
    Except just take pictures. lots of pictures. you can't get to know your camera if you don't use it.
    even if it is snow. again. :)

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    1. That last bit is the best advice -- and the beauty of digital. You can snap 100 pictures in five minutes and it doesn't cost you anything.

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  7. These are some great points. I also have a D90 and I haven't read the manual yet! I get good shots mainly by trial and error, but I think it's about time I actually learn what I'm supposed to be doing.

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    1. I still do a lot of trial and error, but at least now I know what to control when I'm going for a specific effect. (I don't always win, but it helps.)

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