WORKSHOPS?
Why take photo workshops? To learn, expand and enjoy. To take in a new perspective. To find out something new or a new way of thinking about the familiar. It’s …
Why take photo workshops? To learn, expand and enjoy. To take in a new perspective. To find out something new or a new way of thinking about the familiar. It’s …
In his daily blog, “A Learning a Day,” (alearningaday.blog) Rohan Rajiv, provides wonderful everyday wisdom for all of us. One recent post (January 25, 2019) offered these simple words. “Timely …
Shooting in the rain is less common than most other times, so your photos may be a little more unique. Rain can be interesting and it can be easier to …
Is all of our photography practice? Do we practice creating images like doctors practice medicine? Maybe it is more akin to playing music. Sometimes we experiment and try new things …
Without shadow, even the tiniest shadow from texture or some shading, a photo has no depth, no shape. Light is what we measure and shadow is what makes a photo …
Light behaves like … well, like light. It can’t penetrate walls but it sure bounces around. Light has personality that depends on the source and what it bounces off of. …
“Watch your tone, young man!” (“…. dadburned whippersnapper!”) This is usually offered generously as a scolding but is not bad photography advise. The tone of our photos will impact the …
Both Lightroom and Photoshop provide a tone curve function (along with a million sliders) allowing us to fine tune our digital files graphically. What is the tone curve? Here is …
Cameras have gotten more complex. Software features have proliferated and many of those features don’t necessarily contribute to better photos. (And many of us never even try and use them.) …
A video show of a show. We did a lot to create a the Flemington Streetview Photo Project show from getting the shots to mounting and publicizing it. It adds …