Sunday 21 March 2010

Photography - digital photography, photography book


The digital photography handbook,



This is the most helpful book on digital photography I have seen in a while. Each page of the book has some scenario and a ways to work with is to get the best possible shot. It's also covers many different ways to overcome what ever adverse shooting situation you might be. Kelby Talks about cheap ways to overcome situations. He also talks about more expensive ways to overcome situations. On each subject where he discusses a scenario there are usually multiple photos to show you each effect of each solution will have on the photo. Each subject is covered very well in about two pages. The photography is outstanding and in color.



Kelby covers all types of digital photography from portraiture to landscape, lighting flashes, different types of digital cameras.



Kelby covers using a flash, building a studio from scratch, shooting portraits like a pro, shooting landscapes like a pro, shooting weddings like a pro, shooting travel like a pro, shooting macro like a pro, pro tips for getting photos and more photo recipes to help you get the shot. All of these subject are covered very well.



The book is written in an easy to understand, easy to read and with some humor. Each topic is about one page in length.



I consider myself to me an intermediate photographer and I can say that this is and continue to be very helpful to me. I This is a must for the beginner to intermediate photographer. The book is small enough to carry in your camera equipment bag. This book is packed with information and extremely helpful tips. The Digital Photography Book, Volume 2

This book truly has a brilliant premise and here's how Scott Kelby describes it: "If you & I were out on a shoot & you asked me, `When I use my flash, the background behind the person I'm shooting turns black. How do I fix that?' I wouldn't give you a lecture on flash ratios, or start a discussion on flash synchronization and rear curtain synch. I'd just say, 'Lower your shutter speed to 1/60 of a second. That should do it.' Well, that's what this book is all about: you & I out shooting where I answers questions, give you advice, and share the secrets I have learned just as I would a friend-without all the technical explanations and techie photo speak."



Each page covers a single concept on how to make your photography better. Every time you turn the page, you'll learn another pro setting, tool, or trick to transform your work from snapshots into gallery prints. If you are tired of taking shots that are "okay," and if you are tired of looking in photography magazines and thinking, "Why don't my shots look like that?" then this is the book for you.



This isn't a book of theory-full of confusing jargon and detailed concepts. This is a book on which button to push, which setting to use, and when to use it. With nearly 200 more of the most closely guarded photographic "tricks of the trade" this book gets you shooting dramatically better-looking, sharper, more colorful, more professionally-looking photos every time"



Table Of Contents:



CHAPTER 1

Using Flash Like A Pro





10 Things You Wished You Had Known Before Reading This Book!

Here Are Those Last Three Things

Pop-Up Flash: Use It As A Weapon

The Advantages Of A Dedicated Flash

Get Your Flash Off With Your Camera

Making Your Flash Wireless

Going Wireless (Nikon), Part I

Going Wireless (Nikon), Part II

Going Wireless (Canon), Part I

Going Wireless (Canon), Part II

"Drag The Shutter" To See More Background

How To Soften The Light From Your Flash

Softer Light By Bouncing It

Softbox-Quality Light From Your Flash

Tip For Shooting Through A Diffuser

Putting That Nice Twinkle Of Light In The Eyes

Why You Might Want A Stand For Your Flash

Mounting Flashes Anywhere

Rear Synch Rocks (& Why You Should Use It)

The Fourth Secret To Pro Flash Results

Using Gels (& Why You Need Them)

Using Gels To Get That SI Look

If You Have To Use Pop-Up Flash, Do This

Using A Second Flash

Controlling Your Second Flash (Nikon)

Controlling Your Second Flash (Canon)

How Far Back Can You Stand Using Flash?

How To Stand Back Even Farther

Controlling Light To Add Drama

Shooting Sunset Portraits With Flash



CHAPTER 2

Building A Studio From Scratch





Studio Backgrounds

Using Studio Flash (Called Strobes)

Softening Harsh Studio Strobes

Why I Prefer Softboxes To Umbrellas

What A Speed Ring Does (& Why You Need It)

Using A Molding Light

Firing Your Studio Strobe

Firing Your Studio Strobe Wirelessly

Using Contiguous Light Instead

Choosing The Size For Your Softbox

Why You Really Need A Light Meter

How To Use A Light Meter

Adding A Hair Light

Where To Position Your Hair Light

Testing Your Hair Light's Position

Keeping Your Hair Light From Spilling

Which Mode To Shoot In

Where To Position Your Main Light

Using A Fan For Windblown Effects

Want Softer, More Even Light? Feather It?

What That Extra Panel In Your Softbox Does

Using A Pop-Up Collapsible Background

The Least Expensive Extra Light

Three Backgrounds For The Price Of One

Using Off-Camera Flash To Light Backgrounds

The Advantage Of Shooting Tethered

Getting Super-Saturated Background Color

Lighting A White Background

Which Color Reflector To Use

Where To Position A Reflector

Reflectors Without An Assistant

Seeing The Light From Your Reflector

Keep Light From Hitting Background



CHAPTER 3

Shooting Portraits Like A Prayer





Don't Leave To Much Headroom

Shoot In Portrait Orientation

Shooting Portraits? Get A Battery Grip!

The "Sun Over Your Shoulder Rule" Is Bogus

Shoot Wide & Zoom In Tight

Shoot Profile Shots In Horizontal

Shoot Long For More Flattering Portraits

Why Diffusers Rock For Outdoor Portraits

Making A Better Background For Portraits

Trendy Composition Tip

Cropping Off The Top Of Their Head

Group Photos Are Easier Outdoors

Tip For Posing Group Portraits

Great Tip For Casual Group Shots

Don't Light You Entire Subject Evenly

Want Better Portraits? Don't Count Down!

Window Light: Where To Position Your Subject

Window Light: Where You Should Shoot From

Six Quick Tips For Fixing Facial Challenges

Don't Shoot With Their Shoulders Straight On

Making Your Subject Look Slimmer

Using A Poser Chair

Keeping Your Subject "In The Zone"

Avoid Dappled Light

Window Light: Where To Position Your Reflector

Get Couples Really, Really Close

Which Color Reflector To Use

Shoot Outdoor Portraits Shallow

Minimizing Shadows Under The Eyes





CHAPTER 4

Shooting Landscapes Like A Pro



The Secret To Shooting Sunsets

Cutting Reflection In Water

For Landscapes You Need A Clear Subject

Using Your LCD Monitor Outdoors

How To Shoot A Panorama That Works

How To Have Photoshop CS3 Put It Together

Shoot Fast When Shooting Landscape Panos

A Timesaving Pano Trick

The Trick To Using A Fisheye Lens

When To Shoot Streams

Don't Stop Shooting At Sunset

How To Shoot Fog

Getting Shots Of Lightning (Manually)

Getting Shots Of Lightning (Automatically)

A Trick For Shooting Great Rainbows

Removing Distracting Junk

Where To Focus For Landscapes Shots

Find The Great Light First

How To Shoot On A Gray, Overcast Day

A Trick For Great-Looking Flower Shots

The Full Frame Camera Advantage



CHAPTER 5

Shooting Weddings Like A Pro





Create A Shot List

Have Backups For Everything!

Silencing Your Camera's Beep

Backlighting Your Bride

Don't Change Lenses, Change Cameras

Bring A Stepladder For A Higher Vantage Point

Why You Want A Second Shooter

When To Shoot In RAW

Where To Aim Your Flash

Shoot In Lower Light Without Raising Your ISO

A Recipe For Balanced Flash In Church

Add B&W To The Album

The Advantage Of A Flash Bracket

Tip For Posing The Bride

Keeping The Detail In The Bridal Gown

Getting More Flashes Per Wedding

How To Lessen Noise In Your Photos

Tips For Shooting The Brides Profile

Wedding Zoom Effect Made Easy

Read David Ziser's Digital Pro Talk Blog Daily





CHAPTER 6

Shooting Travel Like A Pro





In This Case, Less Gear Is Good

Working People Into Your Travel Shots

Getting People To Pose

What To Shoot On Overcast Days

Shooting From Your Hotel Room

The Magic Time For Cityscapes

Get These Shots Out Of The Way First

Shooting Famous Landmarks

Air Travel With Photo Gear

Shoot The Food

Get A GPS For Your Digital Camera

Shooting Where They Don't Allow Flash

Look For High Vantage Points

Give Yourself A Theme





CHAPTER 7

Shooting Macro Like A Pro





Maximize Your Depth Of Field

Why You Should Turn Auto-Focus Off

Don't Touch That Shutter Button!

Which F-Stop Works Best

Point-&-Shoot Macro Photography

A Tip For Visualizing Macro

Why You Might Want To Shoot Indoors

Buying A Macro Lens

Perfect, Even Light For Macro Shots

Making Your Lens Into A Macro Lens





CHAPTER 8

Pro Tips For Getting Better Photos





Which Mode To Shoot In

Choosing The Right ISO

Which Format To Shoot In (RAW, JPEF, Or TIFF)

Which Size To Shoot In

WHIMS Will Keep You Out Of Trouble

How To Lock Focus

Zooming In Close? Use A High Shutter Speed

When It's Okay To Erase Your Memory Card

Why You Need To Get In Really Close

What To Use Your Histogram For

Leave Your Lens Cap Off

Removing Spots & Specks After The Fact

What Looks Good In Black & White

Recompose, Don't "Fix It" In Photoshop

Want To Be Taken Seriously? Start Editing

Label Your Memory Cards

Go Square

Tips For Shooting At Night (Long Exposure Noise)

The Very Next Book You Should Get





CHAPTER 9

More Photo Recipes To Help You Get "The Shot" - Photography Book - Digital Photography - Lighting - Kelby'


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