Archive for the ‘Digital Photography for Beginners’ Category

Digital Photography for Beginners

Digital Photography has transformed into how to make an image. Not unlike the original revolutionary transformation of photography into a popular medium in the late 1890s when George Eastman invented roll film and in 1892 formed the Eastman Kodak Company for cameras, film and processing sales as a package, the digital photography, the average person with immediate access to the images. Pretty amazing!

What Eastman has to do for photography and digital images, which was, and the process for all. Pre-1892 instead of hauling glass, heavy cameras and tripods and portable darkrooms, all images taken possession of the only experts who gave people Eastman portable cameras, when a litter of 100 images is completed, they returned to Kodak. Kodak then processed the film, prints, and sent the prints and a fully loaded camera back to their customers.

Digital image of the normal process flow. Expose hundreds of images on a disc, turn it into a reader and transfer the images to your computer. Simple, fast and easy! Even if your mobile photos on Facebook.

The question is not open to the excellence in image making to translate? The quick answer is no. There is a clear difference between the ability to trace a picture and a picture to make. The distinction is one of the vision and purpose. If you (to take the operative verb) a recording is a document of a scene or an event without regard for anything other than preserving the memory of a person or place. It is a simple process, one that no training or technology. Aim and shoot and save the results. Nothing more is required. Now do not get me wrong, there is nothing wrong with that. It is important to document a function of photography and to preserve what has ever existed. But this is different than an image of art.

If they make a conscious choice to select an image using photography as an art form, both vision and technique are necessary to translate ideas from place to print. Take as an example of landscape photography. Knowing when the light well, control depth of field, shutter speed, focal length, when to expect mist or fog, the filtration and so use all play a role in the detection of vision you see how a work of art. In addition, the ability to image frame so that it visually appealing as a condition of the art documentation.

The demand for a beginner, if you’re a digital photography and the choice of equipment: Am I interested in documenting the memory of a person or body as my purpose for taking pictures or do I want both the documents and art as well? If your answer is the former, a point and shoot, fixed lens, the automatic camera is more than enough. If your answer is the latter then you might want to consider a hand-held device with interchangeable lenses and allows for manual settings, and the programming options. Equipment selection has everything to do what you want.