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More Resources News

The Same but Different 16

^Hanratty-Stock:iconHanratty-Stock: reports, November 18
There are a lot of themes that run through the stock gallery – many people have similar ideas but they pull them off in different ways. In this series of newsletters we will look at similar ideas but different outcomes.

Global Tutorials Project : Update !

~GlobalTutorials:iconGlobalTutorials: reports, November 16
GTP :Tutorials Update !
1 week of activities and already 30 translated tutorial available !
But we still need YOU !

Resourcefully Yours // Weekly Gems #19

^znow-white:iconznow-white: reports, November 17
A peak at just a few of the Textures submitted this last week to the Resources & Stock Image Gallery with extra added pimpage & info.

Tools, Tutorials, Photographers, and Friends

*Oden36:iconOden36: reports, November 16
News, tips, tutorials, websites, for help in postwork, camera selection, and inspiration....

Stock to Horror

^Hanratty-Stock:iconHanratty-Stock: reports, November 16
A look at macabre and horror digital art using dA stock.

Photographing in Natural / Available Light

*Photo--Assignment:iconPhoto--Assignment: reports, November 16
Using natural lighting for your photography is a handy technique. Apart from the fantastic photos you can produce, you don't have to drag around a lot of equipment. This article breaks it all down for you!

5 Tips to Improve your Photography w/o a Camera

*Photo--Assignment:iconPhoto--Assignment: reports, November 16
The tips here are designed to help you get your eye in, even when you’ve deliberately or (apparently possible) accidentally left your camera at home. They’re also good for anyone who just wants to take a step back and spend some time thinking about where they could go next, without actually doing anything.

PLZ ACCOUNTS!! XD

=nanako87:iconnanako87: reports, November 13
...in other words, some cool PLZ accounts I found xD

Basic stock rules translated? Input please.

^Hanratty-Stock:iconHanratty-Stock: reports, November 13
We'd like input from the stock artists and the stock users to try to make using and understanding dA stock a little easier for everyone and we know that not everyone's mother tongue is English so a little translation might well help.
Click on the link in the title to go to the journal.
:heart:
:peace:

Resources News This Week

Photographing in Natural / Available Light

*Photo--Assignment:iconPhoto--Assignment: reports, November 16
Using natural lighting for your photography is a handy technique. Apart from the fantastic photos you can produce, you don't have to drag around a lot of equipment. This article breaks it all down for you!

Stock to Horror

^Hanratty-Stock:iconHanratty-Stock: reports, November 16
A look at macabre and horror digital art using dA stock.

The Same but Different 16

^Hanratty-Stock:iconHanratty-Stock: reports, November 18
There are a lot of themes that run through the stock gallery – many people have similar ideas but they pull them off in different ways. In this series of newsletters we will look at similar ideas but different outcomes.

5 Tips to Improve your Photography w/o a Camera

*Photo--Assignment:iconPhoto--Assignment: reports, November 16
The tips here are designed to help you get your eye in, even when you’ve deliberately or (apparently possible) accidentally left your camera at home. They’re also good for anyone who just wants to take a step back and spend some time thinking about where they could go next, without actually doing anything.

Resourcefully Yours // Weekly Gems #19

^znow-white:iconznow-white: reports, November 17
A peak at just a few of the Textures submitted this last week to the Resources & Stock Image Gallery with extra added pimpage & info.

Tools, Tutorials, Photographers, and Friends

*Oden36:iconOden36: reports, November 16
News, tips, tutorials, websites, for help in postwork, camera selection, and inspiration....

Global Tutorials Project : Update !

~GlobalTutorials:iconGlobalTutorials: reports, November 16
GTP :Tutorials Update !
1 week of activities and already 30 translated tutorial available !
But we still need YOU !

Animal Guides Contest: NEW DEADLINE.

*Athena-stock:iconAthena-stock: reports, November 17
A new deadline and update to the mysterious Animal Guides contest, hosted by yours truly. Please come check it out and spread the word! :) :rose:

Good links for photography effects

~LeXiElOvE12:iconLeXiElOvE12: reports, November 15
dont got photoshop?look here for other options to edit photography

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Resources


Best Photo Tip I Ever Received… What Was Yours?

*Photo--Assignment:iconPhoto--Assignment: reports, June 25
Last Sunday, I was sitting down with a good friend of mine who just came back from doing a long photography project in Cuba. It's been about five or six years since we studied in college and both our photography careers went in different directions despite the fact we studied under the same program [he landing a pretty good career, me still a starving artist].
We started tossing ideas back and forth and somehow the conversation led to the best photography advice we have received. I jotted down a few of our responses and thought to share with everyone. I called up a few friends, email some, and searched. the internet for more advice.
Below you'll find some famous [and not so] advice, quotes, ect.

If you have a great quote or advice, please share it! We'll have a great reference guide that will always be growing!

Enjoy!
:iconkel-----bel:
Admin *Photo--Assignment

:star: :star: :star:

"Capture an image with a sharp foreground and the rest will follow."

“You don’t take a photograph, you make it”. Ansel Adams

"It’s not camera. Not the lens, filter or sensor. It’s all in your hands and eyes."

"Don’t take boring photos."

"Shoot what you want to see. … That encompases framing, lighting, depth of field. … Pick your subject, and shoot that the way you want it seen"

Advice that my old USSR Zenit camera gave me after I spent around $10 for my first photo film filled with snapshot-like trash:
“Think BEFORE you press the shutter”
Therefore, I’m putting much more effort in my photos now and it works, you know.

"Coverage = horizontal, vertical, wide, medium and closeup."

"Don’t take photographs of subjects, take photographs of the light."

"First know all the rules, then you can go and break them."

The best tip I ever got came from my father way back when he introduced me and my siblings to photography when we were children - starting us with box cameras and, once we earned the right, letting us use his camera and eventually teaching us to develop film and make prints.
His advice - which I generally ignored - was: "take three steps closer."
Superficially this seems pretty vague, and you can even think of lots of shots in which this might actually be the wrong advice. But in terms of getting one to focus on the main subject - or even to make sure that there is a main subject - it is advice I still think of often when I photograph.

Though this one isn’t so critical anymore, but “Check your ISO!” always rings in my head AFTER I’ve left the shoot and realized I shot the whole thing on much-too-high ISO setting.

The best tip I ever read: Bring your camera with you.
Without that, you can forget about making any kind of photograph.

"Get down to children’s level."

"Less is more– More is less Keep it simple"

"Have fun"

"Photography is all about capturing light in the right amount in the right way."

Exposure, exposure, exposure… Did I mention exposure?
Visualize what you want the image to look like and then use your exposure to get that look (adjust aperture, shutter speed and ISO for desired affect).
Now, this is assuming you know composition already.

I don’t remember where I heard it or read it, but the most encouraging advice I ever got as a beginning photographer was the following:
The difference between great photographers and a not so great photographers is that the great ones don’t show their crappy pictures.
This made me realize that even the pros shoot bad pics and don’t be discouraged. Just shoot tons of pictures, get rid of the bad ones and learn from your successes and failures.

Take your camera every where with you. Take pictures off. Try new prespectives. And most of all have fun. I think the fun part was the most important. If you are passionate about what you are taking a picture of, some how that passion translates into the picture.

Look beyond the obvious.
The viewfinder is the frame to your world–use it to your advantage and show others what you see.
Craft images don’t just take pictures.
The camera is only a tool. Purchase the best camera you can afford and use it to its fullest but don’t ever mislead yourself into thinking that a better camera will make you a better photographer. It won’t.

"A meaningful image tells a story"
I originally come from a photo journalist/journalist background. I learned that whatever you are taking a photograph for, you are telling a story. And like every story it should be one that engages people. Now I do art and commercial stuff, and it’s harder if not impossible. However, I try to tell a story in every picture.
The second is related
"Don’t tell the whole story in an image, let the viewer figure some of it out."

"Digital should be no different from film when you press the shutter"
This is one that stuck with me, specifically they were talking about 'wasted shots'
When you hit the shutter, think to yourself ‘is this really worthy of the cost of a negative, the price of printing equipment, the time to process…
If the answer is no, then change the shot so that it is worth that. Just because digital is ‘free’, doesn’t mean this isn’t a good check before you click.

There are so many! Here are two that have made the most impact for me thus far:
In photography, it’s all about the light. Find the great light and you’ll find a great subject there. (I’m not sure where that one came from, I think tis someone Scott Kelby quoted in one of the digital photography books of his)
"If you want to be a better photographyer, stand in front of more interesting stuff." Joe McNall

Somewhere between “Fill the frame”, and “It’s not the camera”.
The first was the tip that literally got me interested in understanding how to actually compose a photo, rather than just blindly snap away at random.
The second tip I kind of told myself when I first wanted to run out and buy an SLR because I thought it would automatically make me a better photographer. It forced me to not only compose and produce better photos, but it taught me to really fully exploit the technology that I already had. I learned to fully push my point and shoot to the max and while I eventually upgraded to an SLR, I did so only with a full understanding of why.

Photography is not about pressing the button. It starts in your head - its what I want to say.

"Don’t try to create amazing artistic images everytime, just go for the moments"

The best advice I have heard is that to become a better photographer, first become a more interesting person, and second stand in front of more interesting things.

The best advise I had ever gotten was to "Be true to yourself" and take pictures that YOU like. Whether it be macro, landscape, food styling, portraits, children or wedding etc… Not pictures that are popular or the “IN” pictures. That way you can concentrate on who you are as a photographer and build upon that. Only than can you go on and learn all there is to learn and build upon those strengths. Either as a professional or like me a hobbiest.

Learn to use your camera… don’t rely on Photoshop to fix your photos!

The very first photography teacher I had in college, back in the days of film, said you can expect to get one or two powerful photos out of each roll (of 36). In other words, don’t take just one shot - keep shooting. That has stuck with me all these years and I still apply it today. I always shoot in continuous mode.

At a conference speaking with a renowned sports photographer and reflecting on all the great shots to be had at the Superbowl and other high end events which most of us will never have access to. His response was simple: "every assignment is the Superbowl"

The best advice I received from my mentor was learn "lighting". He said "if you do not learn anything else at all about photography, learn the lighting."

SHARE … the knowledge. It still amazes how many people hold "their" secrets SO close and won’t share, anything. I’m so glad that I learned this very important advice early in my business. It makes me a greater person both personally and professionally.

Devious Comments

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:iconinstanteseternos:
Every line you wrote is full of truth, and every line is one advice i learn.

Some months ago i took a Photography Course in a museum here in my city, and one advide our teacher told us was: "check out the background, you don't want to see a car behind which take the eye of the viewer out of the main subject, or a tree that looks like horns on your model"

Maybe is a little advice, but i always think about it. Also, another advice i share with you is "fill the frame" but i honestly and proudly can say that i learned by my self when i was taking pictures of my girlfriend, i realized that it looked better if she was in all the frame.

:D
:iconsundeep715:
Really like it....

--
:poke::typerhappy::onfire::onfire::onfire::onfire::onfire::onfire::onfire:
omggggg!!!!!!! u r going to watch me.

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:iconkel-----bel:
Hahah! So true! One of my first assignments I had was at a political press conference....I took a pic of the speaker with phone lines coming out of his head! It looked like antlers!

--
"Too weird to live, too rare to die."
:iconmokhi:
Thanks for sharing
this is awesome :)

--
Beirut Boy | mokhi a.k.a Mokhtar
My 1st DD

:iconinacom:
awesome article! :love:

an advice I read in a Russian photography book by A. Lapin:
sometimes you feel a strong punch to take a picture, sometimes a weaker one. that's the weak one that you most pay attention to: because the strong one might have been in relation to a past experience, or a well-known shot, so nothing original; while the weak "punch" could be for something really interesting, but what you've never seen before, thus its weakness.

from the same book, an advise to better understand composition:
if you wear glasses, look at the picture you want to analyze without them and vice versa.

--
Release the light that is trapped inside of you!
[link]
:icondearkalli:
very interesting. thank you.

--
"Like painting a masterpiece, it's a work of heart" [link]
:iconkirbykatastrofe:
awesome1 this is very inspirational :)
:iconbuckatone:
very helpful and inspirational. thanks fro sharing it wiht us ^^,

--
make ART not WAR.

you're not the only one.

click here [link]
:icontlgtlgr:
Thank you for the tips :dance:

My best: First know all the rules, then you can go and break them.

:D

--
~Sovereignty is not given, it is taken.
 

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