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Photographing Children Photo Workshop: Develop Your Digital Photography Talent

Photographing Children Photo Workshop: Develop Your Digital Photography Talent
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Manufacturer: Wiley
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Photographing Children Photo Workshop: Develop Your Digital Photography Talent Features

ISBN13: 9780470114322
Condition: NEW
Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
 

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Additional Photographing Children Photo Workshop: Develop Your Digital Photography Talent Information

While digital technology has made acceptable photos easy to achieve, this book is about taking exceptional photos that preserve the essence of childhood.You?ll learn to trust your instincts and your own unique vision and discover how to create beautiful photographs in a variety of lighting situations, all while sharpening your observation skills and learning how to involve your subjects. Plus, insightful tips on understanding what equipment is right for you will help you get great results when working with any age group.

 

What Customers Say About Photographing Children Photo Workshop: Develop Your Digital Photography Talent:

This book is easy to read and drives home the points with excellent examples. This is an excellent primer on photography in general. But what better way to inform and bless all the precious moments that lie ahead for the new mom and dad. In my opinion it's one of the ultimate baby blessings. Since I discovered this book this year, I've given three copies to new parents and it has been a tremendous hit.

It has allowed me to directly see the principles outlined in "Photographing Children" in action both in my own work and in others. The greatest lesson I've learned is "seeing the light" which has changed the way I photograph.In addition to the fantastic book, I've had the privilege to be a part of a Facebook group by the same name.

Although I had read several books on photography the previous year, none inspired me quite as much as this one. I read the book quickly because it was well written in simple terms that just made sense.

I received this book last Christmas from my husband as an accompaniment to my new camera. It taught me timeless photography "rules" that help me constantly when photographing anything.

Later I went back and read each chapter more in depth to try to solidify the principles in my mind. And while I did want to learn how to take better photographs of children, Ginny's book taught me much more than that.

Ginny, as well and many other photographers, contribute to make it a great forum for gaining helpful feedback on photographs of children. Why don't you join us.

With studio lights, the closer they are to the subject, the softer they appear.On composition, keep it simple, and do so by getting close. Common settings are:*Sun100*Porch light200*Overcast day200-400*Window light400*Indoor w/o flash800 and up*Stage performance w/o flash1600*Indoor sports event w/o flash1600F stop (aperture) affects depth of field*f/8 to f/22 produce a long depth of field, meaning most things are in focus, this is referred to as shooting closed down. They claim that the aperture (f-stop) determines the depth of field, and discuss this for several pages. The faster the shutter speed, the more likely to freeze motion.

Contouring light is 3 times as much light on one side of your subject as on the other side. With a wide angle lens you are going to have a long depth of field, and with a telephoto, you are going to have a shallow depth of field. Specular light is the bright line dividing the highlight from the shadow. Larger f-stops, such as f/1.5 and f/1.2 make for very selective focus and make everything else blurry.In the chapter on natural light, called "seeing the light", the authors favor natural light, and sweet light with is the first hour of sunlight of the day and the last hour. On the high end:*Toddler roaming 1/250*Kids running 1/500*Child swinging 1/1000For noise free results use ISOs of 100-400. Many authors make this mistake and send amateurs on wild goose chases because they don't have the proper lens to get the depth of field they seek.Below are the notes I took for myself from this book.

The focal length discussion needs to be in the depth of field discussion. I was disappointed with their treatment of depth of field, which is what is in focus. Using your on camera flash as the main light is almost always a mistake. It covers a lot of issues in photography and gives highlights and good advice on many areas. High-key photos are light subjects against a light background.

I hope you find them helpful.Shutter speed can either freeze movement, or cause blurring. Negative space is empty space around your subject that works to emphasize. Most photos in this book were shot between f/1.4 and f/5.6. I thought this book was a good read. The flash in the eyes is called catch lights. There is also a chapter about manipulating light with flash, light modifiers, white balance, and studio lighting. Cosmetic ads are shot with front or flat lighting because it creates a shadowless light that disguises imperfections.

Rembrandt lighting is achieved by placing your subject at a 45-degree angle to your light source such as a window. Never crop off hands and feet. It is not until page 196 where they mention that focal length affects depth of field. Either zoom in to the head and shoulders, or zoom out to get the hands, or zoom out more and get the whole body including feet. *For a short depth of field that makes the subject jump out and the background be more blurry use larger apertures. This is called shooting wide."Photographs are not made by cameras, which are only tools."Program modes;*Portrait mode is a precursor to aperture priority, sports mode to shutter priority, *f/4 and f/5.6 give you pleasing depth of field for portraits. Watch for dark things in light spaces and vice versa.

Focal length*12mmWide angle -good for large groups*50mmStandard -this is what the eye sees*105Telephoto -often considered ideal for portraits (finally).*200mmTelephoto -good for blurring out backgrounds and getting close to action

I bought a couple of other books with this one and this is by far the best. I have run around the house after my kids using the techniques I learned in this book.

I am by no means a professional photographer, I did take a photography class in high school and have always enjoyed photography and taking pictures. After having children, I wanted to improve my skills.

This book is wonderful. It has great assignments at the end of each chapter to help comfirm what you have read.

I bought a new SLR camera to improve the quality of my pictures. This book has helped me understand a lot of the functions of my camera, what differnt setting to use to get the look that I want out of a pictures.

While I still have along way to go, I already can see a difference in my pictures. I think anyone wanting to improve their knowledge on their camera and on the skill of photography would benefit from this.

Thank you for a good product that is well researched and easy to understand. It really helps to follow through with the assignment and acturally try the new things that I have learned about.

The reason I found it so helpful is because of the assgnment at the end of every chapter. I really love the book, "Photographing Children".

I also commented on many other photos that had been submitted. I uploaded photos to the website for critique.

Not enough feed back for sure but seeing what others have done is inspirational. I like the idea so much that I am purchasing more books from this series.

Karren Hubrich

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