Which Magazine/Publication for the Newbie ?

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Simplicius

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I am a beginner, slowly learning about cameras and developing, but more so how to "see". There seems to be many fine publications out there.

What magazine would you recommend to a newbie as the one that consistently will have features that will open their mind to new ways of looking through a lens? and is analog-centric.


Lensman?
Black& White UK
Silvershotz -- looks very inspirational
any others ?


Clueless in Dublin :confused:

Simplicius
 

Steve Smith

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In my opinion, your money would be better spent on photography books.

For the price of a glossy magazine you can usually find a good selection of photographic books from a charity shop (such as Oxfam).

Most of my books are secondhand sourced this way.

Plus - ask lots of questions here.


Steve.
 

Uhner

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I agree with Steve. Besides books I would also visit museums, galleries and other collections that are open to the public.

Another recommendation is to discuss the subject with other photographers and perhaps go on joint excursions and attend workshops.
 

John Koehrer

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About the only magazine that has some traditional content any more is B&W from the UK.
The US version is geared toward collectors of images, View Camera--the name says it all and Photo Techniques has displaced most of it's traditional content with d1tital.
You may find more information on line than at the news stand and traditional books are also being displaced at the bookstore.
There are bunches of good books available in the used market through Amazon
and other online booksellers.
 

Dave Miller

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I agree that you will gain much more from books, do a search for Les McLean, and Dr Tim Rudman on Amazon for starters. For inspiration try Lenswork and Silvershotz mags.
 
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Photo Techniques would be a great start. Maybe some books. I would suggest Ansel Adams' 'The Negative' and 'The Print'.
 

Scott Peters

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Your request was "how to see" . In that case, I would get BandW magazine, Lenswork, maybe silvershotz, focus, etc. so you can see lots of images, current images, vintage, and TRENDS and support the 'cause' so to speak...also, do searches on the web on famous photogs and spend time looking at images....you might want to consider Michael Smith and Paula Chamlee's photo workshop on vision. I believe you are focusing on the right thing.
 

Trevor Crone

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Oh dear! The downhill run accelerates? :sad:

You may have to get a digital back for that 5x4 of yours Trevor. :smile:

Not at all Dave..........Liz is very much orientated towards the art side of photography. There is bound to be digital based articles/material; a result of our 'modern' times I'm affraid. After all the mag. has to cater for a wide readership.

I'm also pleased to say David Corfield will still be wrighting for the mag.

Hell will freeze over before I put a digi-back on my 5x4.:smile:
 

Michel Hardy-Vallée

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Light Leaks has interesting work, and by its nature (toy cameras) caters mostly to an analog crowd.

Aperture and Blind Spot have excellent work, though their focus is not medium-specific, which is not a bad thing because you get articles about artists and not gear.

Books are essential if you want to build some kind of understanding of where photography is today. You can buy them used, but having a good lending library is benefit you will never exhaust.
 
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