Share Your Best Holiday Shots Here

Posted in Articles on December 25th, 2009 by Darren Rowse

Image by garlaandcannon

Image by garlaandcannon

I suspect that over the past 24 hours that many of us have taken more photos than we normally would in a whole month.

It seems like a shame not to see some of them – so I invite you to share your very best 2-3 in comments below.

Once you’ve taken your photos – choose your best ones, upload them to your favourite photo sharing site either share a link to them even better – embed them in the comments using the our new tool to do so.

Looking forward to seeing how people around the world are celebrating (and recording) the holiday period this week!

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

dpsbook.png

Share Your Best Holiday Shots Here


Brief test: Nikon S1000pj projector camera

Posted in Articles on December 24th, 2009 by Digital Photography Now
We've been playing with Nikon's rather amazing new S1000pj compact camera that has a built-in projector. Find out what we thought of Nikon's projector-cam - is it a gimmick or a really useful evolution of the camera?

Happy Christmas from DPS

Posted in Articles on December 24th, 2009 by Darren Rowse

Image by duane.schoon

Image by duane.schoon

On behalf of the team here at DPS Virtual HQ I’d like to wish you and yours a very happy Christmas (it’s just ticked over to Christmas day here in Australia).

It’s been an amazing year here at DPS and we’re incredibly grateful to you for reading, commenting, submitting posts, sharing us with your friends, subscribing and more.

This year saw DPS grow to a readership over over 3 million people a month and a over 350,000 subscribers. Our forum is coming up on 80,000 members, on Twitter we have over 20,000 followers, on Facebook there’s a loyal group of 5000+ fans and we’ve seen a lot of new features added to the site since our redesign.

Also a big development for us this year was the release of our very first product – our Portrait E-book – which is selling well and will help us to grow the site further in the year ahead. Expect another E-book in the new year with more on a variety of photography topics to follow later in the year.

It’s been a big year so over the next week we’ll have a slightly quieter than normal pace in terms of new tutorials – scaling it back to just a single new tutorial a week to give our writing team a break – but the forums will continue to crank as normal so stop by to share your holiday shots and tell us about your new photography gear!

Thanks to everyone for making DPS what it is – especially our writers, moderators and administrative team!

Happy Christmas!

PS: Sime (our Community Manager) sends his Christmas greetings here in the forum.

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

dpsbook.png

Happy Christmas from DPS


Looking for a Last Minute Photography Gift For Christmas?

Posted in Articles on December 24th, 2009 by Darren Rowse

200912241359.jpgIf you’re anything like me you’ve probably left your Christmas shopping to the last minute (as I write this post there are exactly 3 hours left til the shops close here in Australia and I still need to get one more gift)!

If you’re still searching for a great photography gift for that special photographer in your life (or perhaps a treat for yourself) we’re happy to provide you with a solution here at DPS – our Essential Guide to Portrait Photogrpahy.

While an e-book is a little hard to wrap I’ve had a lot of readers email me today to tell me that they’ve just bought copies as gifts for family and friends. It’s particularly good because you don’t have to leave your house to get it and there’s no delivery fee – just pay for it and download.

Some are being quite creative in how they give them too with many burning the PDF onto CDs/DVDs so that they’re able to wrap it up. Others are buying them and then forwarding the download link onto the receiver of the gift via an email.

Learn more about what the E-book covers and grab your copy here.

We’re open to either approach – all we ask is that you help us out by buying a copy for each person you give them to.

PS: also check out these 10 great photography E-books which might make a nice bundle with ours!

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

dpsbook.png

Looking for a Last Minute Photography Gift For Christmas?


Capturing Time & Motion [Book Review]

Posted in Articles on December 23rd, 2009 by Barrie Smith

Capturing Time & Motion.jpgThere are quite a few elements that lead to a fine photographic image: framing, focus, contrast, lighting etc.

However the single most compelling ingredient that transcends the stillness of a photograph is motion, a component that we all too often try to avoid in the quest for sharpness!

Confirming this view, Joseph Meehan’s book – Capturing Time & Motion – stresses that “motion is something that we going to use rather than try to eliminate.”

A graphic series of six shots taken in a snowstorm spells out the situation: the one second exposure depicts the falling snow as a blurr; the 1/250m second exposure freezes the individual snow flakes. Time is motion.
The appropriate shutter speed is at the heart of it; shapes and textures blurr; varied planes of action are captured; movement becomes surreal.

An important lesson is given: even though motion in a picture may be a dominant factor, it is imperative that composition is carefully controlled, possibly to a greater degree than a more static image.

Quite a few pages are given to operating your camera: selecting aperture or shutter priority is important; ensuring you have the correct colour balance setting; handling focus — auto or manual?

Capturing motion is a very specialized part of photography and Meehan’s book takes you through the subject very thoroughly.

My only niggle is that, for me, few of his pictures really rocked my boat!

Author: J Meehan.
Publisher: Lark Books.
Distributor: Capricorn Link.
Length: 175 pages.
ISBN: 13 978 1 60059 467 0.
Price: Capturing Time & Motion is $21.56 at Amazon (28% off).

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

dpsbook.png

Capturing Time & Motion [Book Review]