Saturday, June 9, 2007

Depth of Field, A Landscape Photographer's Best Friend





Artist/Photographer: Wayne Wilkinson
Title: Northern Illinois Landscapes
Date: April-May 2007
Camera(s) Vivitar 5100; Fujifilm S700
Purchase: Direct from Artist, enquiries welcome
NOTICE: *Any attempt to download images
will result in permanent system failure to your hard drive*
DO NOT DOWNLOAD THESE COPYRIGHTED PHOTOS~!!
________________________________________
Maximum depth of field should be the goal for most efforts at landscape photography, particularly when you wish to convey a sense of presence within a multi-dimensional landscape. There are, however, times when you might wish to have a single subject be the central theme of the composition - allowing that subject to clearly stand out against the background landscape. In such a composition, the background should be left a little out-of focus, while the primary subject should be as sharply delineated as possible. At such times, rather than stopping down to the smallest aperture opening possible, set your aperture at the mid f-stop range. When a single subject deserves to be the central focus of your image, shoot it at f/5.6 or f/8.
It is in this aperture mid-range where the sharpest delineation of an individual subject can be achieved. I don’t fully understand the reason for this and don’t wish to bore you with such technical details. But it is important to understand that the sharpest delineation of an individual object within a landscape occurs at the middle f-stop range - at f/5.6 or f/8.

Friday, June 8, 2007

Nature Photography Tips






Nature Photography Tips

Photography is 90% Seeing and 10% Photographing...

Photography Tips to help possibly improve your photographs:

Only you and your inner self can make this happen.


Equipment Readiness:
Being prepared starts with regular, routine maintenance of your camera and equipment. Make taking care of your camera gear one of your main priorities.Well-maintained equipment will help you in creating those exceptional photographs.Inspect the interior of the camera body and use a camel hairbrush or blower to remove any dust or foreign particles that you might find in the interior of the body.( Invert camera so particles fall from camera)Inspect the mirror for any dust or scratches and gently blow dust particles from the surface.If the mirror needs more attention, please let a professional repair person do those repairs.Check battery compartment – look for battery acid and clean area with a Q-Tip.Check your lenses on every photo outing. Clean as needed, but don’t over clean.

Equipment – second nature:

Practice with your CAMERA until it becomes and extension of your arm.

Camera / Gear bag checklist:

Whether you're two hundred miles away or just around the corner, a camera bag checklist is a handy way to help ensure that you will spend your time creating pictures, instead of trying to find a store that sells batteries or film. You can use the following checklist as a starting point and modify it to suit your specific needs.

Fresh and/or fully charged batteries and spare batteries for camera bodies: Flash unit and spare batteries

Film - (Slide or Print for your particular needs)

Lenses (step-up or step-down rings for accessory filters)

Teleconverters - ( 1.4 or 2x converters)

Filters (polarizer, fluorescent, UV, graduated, skylight, warming, 80A and 80B)

Tripod or Monopod; Portable digital storage unit for digital cameras

Lens brush; Lens cleaning fluid and tissues
Lens cloth - microfiber
Plastic bags of various sizes for foul-weather protection
Foul-weather camera coverFanny-pack camera bag

Laptop computer with fully charged battery
Additional items:
In addition to being prepared with well-functioning equipment, be sure to think ahead for other things you'll need while you're gone. Here's a list to get you started:

Bottled water Business cards

Cell phone, spare battery, and car charger cord
Compass Flashlight

Foul-weather clothing
Hand wipes

Identification, driver's license Maps
Masking tape or duct tape (Gaffer Tape, more expensive but does not leave any residue)

Nonperishable snacks

Notepad and pensSmall tool setTissues

Towel and wash cloth

Watch

If you are going solo on your photography trip, make sure you give someone your trip itinerary.

I much prefer having someone accompany me on any of my trips and my family always knows the locations that I will be photographing at.

Experience our Natural World:
Don’t get so wrapped up in photographing your subject that you forget to enjoy our beautiful Natural World.Photography Aids: Depth of Field Calculator

Hyper - focal Distance CardRight click on card to save.Mounting and caring for your Fine Art Print
Click Here


Below is the most important of all
Photography Tips:



" NO PHOTOGRAPH IS WORTH CREATING IF IT IS GOING TO ADVERSELY IMPACT THE WELFARE OF YOUR SUBJECT "

Be a good role model, both as person and as a photographer.
Share your experiences with others.
Get individuals excited about our natural world.


REMEMBER:


The goods of the earth are gifts from God. We have a responsibility to care for these goods as stewards and trustees, not as mere consumers and users.
"Dedicated to helping create an appreciation ... awareness an concern for our environment through the power of photography and education"

Flower Photography Tips





Artist: Wayne Wilkinson
Series: Fine Art Flowers
Date: April-June 2007
Individual & Group Prints Available
Please Enquire

Whether in your garden or a vase, flowers charm and enchant the eye with their dazzling colors and delightful shapes. Here are some tips to help make your flower pictures equally charming and enchanting.
Use a simple background Find a position that provides a plain, non-competing background. Or place a black or pleasingly colored cardboard behind the flower.
Get close If your camera has a close-up focusing mode, use it and get as close as the camera manual suggests. With a digital camera, use the display screen to compose the picture. Accessory close-up lenses are mandatory for dedicated flower photographers.
Shoot at different angles Vary the level of your viewpoint. Shoot down to create attractive pinwheel patterns of daisies; kneel to the level of other flowers, such as tulips and daffodils.
Use creative lighting Observe the lighting on your flowers. Backlighting shining through some flowers gives them an appealing glow. Cloudy-day lighting reveals subtle hues. A lightbox or Flashlight can be invaluable for this!
Control the wind Is the wind tossing the tulip about? Bring the tulip indoors and create an attractive still life that you can easily photograph. Put the tulip in a vase and place it near a window. Or use a piece of cardboard to block the wind. Choose your camera angle so the cardboard doesn't show in the picture. Or choose a colored board and position it to block the wind and to serve as the background.



Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Celtic Snake Fine Art Photo 5 x 7

Celtic Snake
Camera Vivicam 5100
Shutter 1/115
F 3.5
Zoom 42mm
EV -0.7
Limited Edtion of 50 prints
________________________________
Our subject is the bass relief on a grave marker located in Oak Wood Cemetery, Dixon, IL. <-Click for link...This stoney reptile is hand-hewn on granite. Part of the Celtic heritage of the Sauk Valley, this cemetery is among my favorite photographic haunts. I trust you will like it too.














Top Ten Digital Photography Tips

You've heard this before: Digital cameras do all the work. You just push the button and great pictures magically appear. The better the camera, the better the photos. Isn't that right? Heck no!

The truth is that you can make great photos with a simple consumer point-and-shoot camera, or take lousy shots with the most expensive Nikon. It's not the camera that makes beautiful images; it's the photographer. With a little knowledge and a willingness to make an adjustment here and there, you can squeeze big time photos out of the smallest digicam.

To help you down the road to great image making, here are ten tips that will enable you shoot like a pro (without maxing out your credit card on all that expensive equipment).

1. Warm Up Those Tones

Have you ever noticed that your shots sometimes have a cool, clammy feel to them? If so, you're not alone. The default white balance setting for digital cameras is auto, which is fine for most snapshots, but tends to be a bit on the "cool" side.

When shooting outdoor portraits and sunny landscapes, try changing your white balance setting from auto to cloudy. That's right, cloudy. Why? This adjustment is like putting a mild warming filter on your camera. It increases the reds and yellows resulting in richer, warmer pictures.

If you don't believe me, then do a test. Take a few outdoor shots with the white balance on auto, then take the same picture again with the setting on cloudy. Upload the images to your computer and look at them side by side. My guess is that you'll like the warmer image better.

2: Sunglasses Polarizer

If you really want to add some punch to your images, then get your hands on a polarizing filter. A polarizer is the one filter every photographer should have handy for landscapes and general outdoor shooting. By reducing glare and unwanted reflections, polarized shots have richer, more saturated colors, especially in the sky.

What's that you say? Your digital camera can't accommodate filters. Don't despair. I've been using this trick for years with my point-and-shoot cameras. If you have a pair of quality sunglasses, then simply take them off and use them as your polarizing filter. Place the glasses as close to the camera lens as possible, then check their position in the LCD viewfinder to make sure you don't have the rims in the shot.

For the best effect, position yourself so the sun is over either your right or left shoulder. The polarizing effect is strongest when the light source is at a 90-degree angle from the subject.

3. Outdoor Portraits That Shine

One of the great hidden features on digital cameras is the fill flash or flash on mode. By taking control of the flash so it goes on when you want it to, not when the camera deems it appropriate, you've just taken an important step toward capturing great outdoor portraits.
In flash on mode, the camera exposes for the background first, then adds just enough flash to illuminate your portrait subject. The result is a professional looking picture where everything in the composition looks good. Wedding photographers have been using this technique for years.

After you get the hang of using the flash outdoors, try a couple variations on this theme by positioning the subject so the sun illuminates the hair from the side or the back, often referred to as rim lighting. Another good technique is to put the model in the shade under a tree, then use the flash to illuminate the subject. This keeps the model comfortable and cool with no squinty eyes from the harsh sun, and this often results in a more relaxed looking portrait.
Remember, though, that most built-in camera flashes only have a range of 10 feet (or even less!), so make sure you don't stand too far away when using fill flash outdoors.

4. Macro Mode Madness

Remember as a kid discovering the whole new world beneath your feet while playing on the grass? When you got very close to the ground, you could see an entire community of creatures that you never knew existed.

These days, you might not want to lie on your belly in the backyard, but if you activate the close up mode on your digital camera and begin to explore your world in finer detail, you'll be rewarded with fresh new images unlike anything you've ever shot before.

Even the simplest object takes on new fascination in macro mode. And the best part is that it's so easy to do with digital cameras.

Just look for the close up or macro mode icon, which is usually a flower symbol, turn it on, and get as close to an object as your camera will allow. Once you've found something to your liking, hold the shutter button down halfway to allow the camera to focus. When the confirmation light gives you the go ahead, press the shutter down the rest of the way to record the image.
Keep in mind that you have very shallow depth of field when using the close up mode, so focus on the part of the subject that's most important to you, and let the rest of the image go soft.

5. Horizon Line Mayhem

For some mysterious reason, most human beings have a hard time holding the camera level when using the LCD monitors on their digicams. The result can be cockeyed sunsets, lopsided landscapes, and tilted towers.

Part of the problem is that your camera's optics introduce distortion when rendering broad panoramas on tiny, two-inch screens. Those trees may be standing straight when you look at them with the naked eye, but they seem to be bowing inward on your camera's monitor. No wonder photographers become disoriented when lining up their shots.

How do you square up an image in the LCD viewfinder so it appears "level" when you view it later on the computer? Look for nature's horizontal lines and use them as guides. Sometimes you can use the line where the sky meets the ocean, other times you can use a strip of land as your level. In this case I used the shoreline of a mountain lake to help me align this composition. (Canon PowerShot G2, Aperture Priority exposure set to f-8, polarizer filter)

What can you do? Well, there's no silver bullet to solve all of your horizon line problems, but you can make improvements by keeping a few things in mind.

First of all, be aware that it's important to capture your images as level as possible. If you're having difficulty framing the scene to your liking, then take your best shot at a straight picture, reposition the camera slightly, take another picture, and then maybe one more with another adjustment. Chances are very good that one of the images will "feel right" when you review them on the computer. Simply discard the others once you find the perfectly aligned image.
If you practice level framing of your shots, over time the process will become more natural, and your percentage of level horizon lines will increase dramatically.

6: Massive Media Card

When you're figuring out the budget for your next digital camera, make sure you factor in the purchase of an additional memory card. Why? Because the cards included with your new high-tech wonder toy are about as satisfying as an airline bag of peanuts when you're dying of hunger.

If you have a 3 megapixel camera, get at least a 256MB card, 512MBs for 4 megapixel models, and 1GB for for 6 megapixels and up. That way you'll never miss another shot because your memory card is full.

7: High Rez All the Way

One of the most important reasons for packing a massive memory card is to enable you to shoot at your camera's highest resolution. If you paid a premium price for a 6 megapixel digicam, then get your money's worth and shoot at 6 megapixels. And while you're at it, shoot at your camera's highest quality compression setting too.

Why not squeeze more images on your memory card by shooting a lower resolution and low quality compression settings? Because you never know when you're going to capture the next great image of the 21st century. And if you take a beautiful picture at the low 640 x 480 resolution, that means you can only make a print about the size of a credit card, not exactly the right dimensions for hanging in the museum.

On the other hand, if you recorded the image at 2272 x 1704 (4 megapixels) or larger, then you can make a lovely 8- x 10-inch photo-quality print suitable for framing or even for gracing the cover of Time magazine. And just in case you were able to get as close to the action as you had liked, having those extra pixels enables you to crop your image and still have enough resolution to make a decent sized print.

The point is, if you have enough memory (and you know you should), then there's no reason to shoot at lower resolution and risk missing the opportunity to show off your work in a big way.

8: Tolerable Tripod

I once overheard someone say, "He must be a real photographer because he's using a tripod." Well, whether or not you use a tripod has nothing to do with you being a true photographer. For certain types of shots though, these three-legged supports can be very useful.

The problem is tripods are a pain in the butt to carry around. They are bulky, unwieldily, and sometimes downright frustrating. Does the phrase "necessary evil" come to mind?
For digital shooters there's good news: the UltraPod II by Pedco. This compact, versatile, ingenious device fits in your back pocket and enables you to steady your camera in a variety of situations. You can open the legs and set it on any reasonable flat surface such as a tabletop or a boulder in the middle of nowhere. But you can also employ its Velcro strap and attach your camera to an available pole or tree limb.

You might not need a tripod that often, but when you do, nothing else will work. Save yourself the pain and money of a big heavy lug of a pod, and check out the svelte UltraPod. Yes, then you too can be a real photographer.

9: Self Timer Fun

Now that you have your UltraPod in hand, you can explore another under-used feature found on almost every digital camera: the self timer. This function delays the firing of the shutter (after the button has been pushed) for up to 10 seconds, fixing one of the age old problems in photography: the missing photographer.

Hey, just because you've been donned as the creative historian in your clan, that doesn't mean that your shining face should be absent from every frame of the family's pictorial accounting. You could hand your trusty digicam over to strangers while you jump in the shot, but then you take the chance of them dropping, or even worse, running off with your camera.
Instead, attach your UltraPod, line up the shot, activate the self timer, and get in the picture. This is usually a good time to turn on the flash to ensure even exposure of everyone in the composition (but remember that 10 foot flash range limit!). Also, make sure the focusing sensor is aimed at a person in the group and not the distant background, or you'll get very sharp trees and fuzzy family members.

Self timers are good for other situations, too. Are you interested in making long exposures of cars driving over the Golden Gate Bridge at dusk? Once again, secure your camera on a tripod, then trip the shutter using the self timer. By doing so, you prevent accidental jarring of the camera as you initiate the exposure.

10. Slow Motion Water

I come from a family where it's darn hard to impress them with my artsy pictures. One of the few exceptions happened recently when my sister commented that a series of water shots I had shown her looked like paintings. That was close enough to a compliment for me.

What she was responding to was one of my favorite types of photographs: slow motion water. These images are created by finding a nice composition with running water, then forcing the camera's shutter to stay open for a second or two, creating a soft, flowing effect of the water while all the other elements in the scene stay nice and sharp.

You'll need a tripod to steady the camera during the long exposure, and you probably should use the self timer to trip the shutter. If you camera has an aperture priority setting, use it and set the aperture to f-8, f-11, or f-16 if possible. This will give you greater depth of field and cause the shutter to slow down.

Ideally, you'll want an exposure of one second or longer to create the flowing effect of the water. That means you probably will want to look for streams and waterfalls that are in the shade instead of the bright sunlight.

Another trick is to use your sunglasses over the lens to darken the scene and create even a longer exposure. Plus you get the added bonus of eliminating distracting reflections from your composition.

Final Thoughts

Most digital cameras, even the consumer point-and-shoot models, have a tremendous amount of functionality built into them. By applying a little ingenuity and creativity, you can take shots that will make viewers ask, "So what kind of camera do you have?"
You can tell them the answer, but inside, you'll know it's not the camera responsible for those great pictures. It's the photographer.
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Derrick Story is the digital media evangelist for O'Reilly, as well as the author of Digital Photography Hacks and Digital Photography Pocket Guide. You can listen to his photo podcasts and read his tips at The Digital Story. Aperture fans might want to check out his co-authored video training on Lynda.com titled, Aperture 1.5 Beyond the Basics.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Don't Shoot 5 x 7 Fine Art Print

Don't Shoot
fine art photo
Camera: Vivicam 5100
Exposure 1/160
F Stop F 4
ISO 100
Edition Limited to 50 prints
_____________________________
This pic was taken at the Wings of Peace and Freedom Park in Dixon, IL. This park features an installation of the Berlin Wall exhibit. Why is this important? President Ronald Reagan is a "hometown boy" of this city. Our subject illustrates the perils of cold war Europe while attempting to cross the de-militarized zone of East Berlin.
-ww
Fuji Film Crystal Archival Matte Finish $7.50 USD. Guaranteed to last over 100 years!