Cholentpot
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- Oct 26, 2015
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Don't use flash
Tame the flash. Get friendly with it and take it off the camera, maybe give it it's own space...
Don't use flash
Of course always season to taste.#9 works sometimes. If 12 year old Susan is smiling but grandma ain't and it's a closeup headshot the photo might be unusable.
Of course always season to taste.
Family snapshots are often made for the benefit of others. "Let's all stand by the x-mas tree" and that sort. Generally, the object is to create a cliche. And for me, a cliche is not an important photo. My comments were aimed at beyond those kind of photos. If I was doing a portrait of someone, and I have done lots of them, I want them to project what they want, not what I want. In my experience, I found there are "smilers" and "non-smilers" and after much thinking and shooting, I realized that a requested "smile" will almost never be a true one. The non-smilers usually do not feel comfortable smiling and the smilers always feel comfortable smiling and smile readily any time a camera is pointed their way. It's as natural as breathing; But for the non-smiler, smiling is a physical exercise they are always trying to master, but never do. I no longer say anything when taking a portrait. I just wait.
.......
just do whatever you want and not care what anyone else says or thinks and be comfortable with your camera.
nothing else really matters ...
what are some simple things regular folks with a camera can do to get better negatives
I should have noticed this, but didn't. The responses all depend on the meaning of "better." I apologize for falling into the tar pit.
I also think pdeeh (post #10) has some excellent points. I would say *all* his points are worth following.
Take more photos. If you find something that you'd like to photograph, instead of taking one photo, take three or ten, or more, exploring various angles and compositions.
When you have more photo's from the same subject or environment you can make a small series and post/show them together. The art of making series of photos that belong to each other is a skill not seen much. One difficulty is that all the photo's must have the same properties like sharpness, grain, contrast, tonality etc. even when the lighting is different when photographed from different angles.
An 'advantage' of a series is that most individual photos don't need to be exiting and unique like single photo's as long as they fit together harmoniously.
I once saw a remark somewhere that (traditional) Japanese photographers were using it a lot but I can't find any info about it or a confirmation, so maybe I remembered it wrong.
To develop the skill you need to create an inventory of related images to curate. It is hard work.That's definitely a skill I'd like to work on developing.
I should have noticed this, but didn't. The responses all depend on the meaning of "better." I apologize for falling into the tar pit.
The first bestest thing is to resign from Facebook (if you can figure out how).
https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/b...n-arguments-deleting-social/story?id=56009512
https://www.theguardian.com/technol...dawn-new-everything-interview-virtual-reality
better can mean whatever you want, better prints better negatives, better anything, even "more comfortable" with what you are making
FB has absolutely nothing to do with this thread ... especially because there are social groups on FB that
can MAKE you a better photographer. you know, people interested in photography instead of other stuff.
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