
Once you start looking, you find pictures anywhere ..
Everyday objects and situations arise faster than you can take a picture.
You will find that there is never a shortage of material and decide what to do and you will soon have a variety of unique images and the digital originals.
While studying art history, and learned about Monet and his obsession with light, its famous haystack paintings, and his interest in changing light, meant nothing until I went to catch the light in some tropical plants. All lesson suddenly jumped into the accent and everything fell into place. Monet had actually is going to capture all that light, once I take note of this, changes in light almost like watching and now I can understand their obligation to put everything down before of modifications.
Fortunately, with a digital camera, you could freeze this moment in time and have an instant record this point in time and can be magic.
One of the best learning experiences is to lose the best picture, thinking to get back on the road again, or find that has changed disappeared, or the light had changed. Who should know better, but I missed a great shot me the other day. I saw a herd of cows selected for door, looking at all the same way, the lighting perfect, the image almost entirely attributable to me, was almost the camera and found him at home in the bank.
Simple tips to try before you start taking a photograph
- Spend some time around you. Look, look down, look around
- Stroll through some distance and then return before taking a photo
- Search to see if there's a better shot from another angle
- Take time to notice things that would never see if he had started shooting immediately
- Set in the ambience of your place of choice and the first to become aware of their surroundings
- Take a second look at things you usually do not give a second look
- Experience where the light enters and look to see what really makes an angle greater opportunity
- Move and be near – flush more often works away in general, not
Some ideas to try
- Rust is amazing to shoot and has a wide range of colors and shades, with such diversity.
- Mold, and mud are also good starting points. Suppose you have your camera on macro, go out and see what we can find surprised to see your photos can pix look fantastic with close to some of them.
- Cobwebs can look ethereal Surrealist or extended in some iron age or rotted wood – even his old home and fireplace ashes are scattered can get surprisingly good with a little editing and have looked to see the faces so you can see inside your photos to zoom.
- Kitchen utensils make great catches and some big guys can do something very different summary
- Foods such as eggs, strawberries and vegetables can take stunning photos and something as simple as Cabbage is the most exciting and attractive texture and make posters and prints.
- Think about having some of your favorite photos printed Enjoy painting
I hope this inspires you to take another look at their world.
Carol Skinner is a creative artist and photography enthusiast living in rural Northland, New Zealand.
Carol is passionate about art, photography and cooking and can spend hours taking and editing photographs and using them to paint from or as collage or her internet blogs and sites and through the internet rediscovered her fondness for writing articles. She has an organic garden, a caravan greenhouse and grows herbs and Bromeliads that often feature in her photographs and also enjoys photographing her finished recipes for her own food and recipe websites.
Website: http://digitalphotographyhub.com
New Zealand Photos ‘Aotearoa’