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You're in Paris and are so excited to take a photograph of your loved one in front of the Eiffel Tower that you snap at the first opportunity. The result: there are so many strangers in the photograph that it's hard to tell that your friend is the one who appears to have a giant horn growing out of her head. If you slow down and take the time to compose the perfect photograph, you'll be far happier with the result.
This should be a prerequisite for new and or great review for any camera owner who is taking pictures for the first time or still weekend pro. Be it film or digital. All of the information and tips are right on the money and easy to understand and use. Thank-you, now maybe we won't see so many at eye level and uninteresting shots.
Seems like most of this should be in every camera manual, would probably save thousands of cams from living out their days in a bag near the back of the closet.
Finally, something about composition I haven't seen. Excellent for reminding and finding new things on the topic.
I'm considering this camera:
http://adwido.com/view_content?vkey=7e03fbf4b23d7641ffac46cffc0708df
Would this tutorial be recommended for it?
Easy to read, crystal-clear and the best of all is that they put an example picture to help you visualize each concept.
All seemed to be common sense type tips, but often we forget, because we are in a hurry to capture the "moment".
I think the first tip was in paragraph one,"If you slow down and take the time..."
Easy to understand for beginners and good reminders for weekend photographers. These are all a must to get the most out of your photos. The digital world has brought us to new beginnings in photography and these are good rules to abide by and to break once in a while also!