I was due to write the next part of my photography analysis series this week but yesterday I listened to a really interesting podcast featuring a gentleman called Pat Pattison that was originally broadcast on a channel called The Candid Frame last summer – 6th July 2015 in fact. It seemed very pertinent to me at…
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HISTORY Photography has come a long way from the early days of sepia tinted images and cyanotypes which we are all familiar with to where anyone can print a colour photo on their home printer in seconds. Colour photography and film weren’t really common until the sixties and most people shot in black and white….
Exposure is defined by Wiki as the amount of light per unit area reaching a photographic film or electronic image sensor, as determined by shutter speed, lens aperture and scene luminance. If too much light is absorbed, the image will be over exposed – usually characterised by areas of bright white, highlights or sky that…
Today I’m going to start a series of posts going into more detail about what makes a great photo. I did touch on this way back on 29 September and introduced what I think are the six fundamental aspects of a photo – five of them have a technical element and one is, perhaps, more subjective. Exposure…
Last week I wrote a piece about winter photography and, in particular, snow. But if you prefer something more exacting, then I would strongly recommend you take the time to investigate the work of Don Komarechka who is the best photographer of snowflakes in the world. (c) Don Komarechka He has a book available called…