This is the second installment of our look at the three most important habits I see in the most successful, professional photographers who pass through the GlobalEye Photo Agency each month. We covered Lighting and Patience in the first installment -- if you missed that, you can check our sell stock photos blog -- otherwise we'll dive back in and look at technique.
For all the benefit of automatic-everything cameras, I sometimes wish they were somehow only available after the photographers had passed a manual photography course. Sadly, it is so straightforward and so convenient, that most photographers who start out on fully automatic never go back and find out how to control the camera settings themselves.
And that means there are a huge number of photographers out there making images that are almost great ... But because they have no theory and only very basic technical skills, they won't ever know what's holding them back and more importantly, how simple it is to correct the mistakes and make great photographs.
I see this each week with the membership application submissions. Images that could have been stunning if the photographer had only turned off the center weighted auto focus and gave more attention to their subject. Shots that could have been stunning if they'd turned off the preset exposure mode, and thought about their depth-of-field. Shots that would have been stunning if only they'd thought about the effects of shutter speed ...
The other disappointment is those photographers who do not even bother to read the manual that came with their camera so they would make use of the features available to them. Here are just a few problems .. And the photographer's explanations ... That I've seen just lately ...
1. Great submission of stock photos, but all of them had a significant color cast that even I (seriously color-blind) could spot.
"Yes, I saw something about setting white balance, but figured the factory settings would have it covered..."
2. Strong subjects & compositions, but too grainy to ever use ...
"That's possibly because I keep the ISO set to 1600 so I don't have to stress about flash using up my batteries ... "
3. Amazing submission ... Technically spot on & material perfectly suited for stock, except they were shot as medium jpgs ...
"I didn't want to run out of space on my memory stick ... "
The last one might sound absolutely ridiculous but is a familiar story around here ... The photographer had a $2000 camera and was shooting lots of great photos every week with real stock potential, if only he'd spent another $50 on a couple of extra memory sticks. (The average point-and- shoot these days captures a better quality file than the one this guy was saving!)
So the final suggestion here is, if your total photography experience is digital-auto, every chance you can, switch off the auto-everything and learn how to do it yourself.
Even better, call into the local used camera gear shop and pick up an old manual film camera ... They are giving them away these days ... And put one or two rolls of film thru it. You'll learn more from those 100 shots than a year with your digital auto-everything!
OK, that's just a few general ideas to get you started. Next time around I will cover a couple more specific elements we see in the top selling pictures and a simple trick to be certain you get them right each and every time.
For now, feel free to visit our website and post your own thoughts on what makes a photographer a professional!
For all the benefit of automatic-everything cameras, I sometimes wish they were somehow only available after the photographers had passed a manual photography course. Sadly, it is so straightforward and so convenient, that most photographers who start out on fully automatic never go back and find out how to control the camera settings themselves.
And that means there are a huge number of photographers out there making images that are almost great ... But because they have no theory and only very basic technical skills, they won't ever know what's holding them back and more importantly, how simple it is to correct the mistakes and make great photographs.
I see this each week with the membership application submissions. Images that could have been stunning if the photographer had only turned off the center weighted auto focus and gave more attention to their subject. Shots that could have been stunning if they'd turned off the preset exposure mode, and thought about their depth-of-field. Shots that would have been stunning if only they'd thought about the effects of shutter speed ...
The other disappointment is those photographers who do not even bother to read the manual that came with their camera so they would make use of the features available to them. Here are just a few problems .. And the photographer's explanations ... That I've seen just lately ...
1. Great submission of stock photos, but all of them had a significant color cast that even I (seriously color-blind) could spot.
"Yes, I saw something about setting white balance, but figured the factory settings would have it covered..."
2. Strong subjects & compositions, but too grainy to ever use ...
"That's possibly because I keep the ISO set to 1600 so I don't have to stress about flash using up my batteries ... "
3. Amazing submission ... Technically spot on & material perfectly suited for stock, except they were shot as medium jpgs ...
"I didn't want to run out of space on my memory stick ... "
The last one might sound absolutely ridiculous but is a familiar story around here ... The photographer had a $2000 camera and was shooting lots of great photos every week with real stock potential, if only he'd spent another $50 on a couple of extra memory sticks. (The average point-and- shoot these days captures a better quality file than the one this guy was saving!)
So the final suggestion here is, if your total photography experience is digital-auto, every chance you can, switch off the auto-everything and learn how to do it yourself.
Even better, call into the local used camera gear shop and pick up an old manual film camera ... They are giving them away these days ... And put one or two rolls of film thru it. You'll learn more from those 100 shots than a year with your digital auto-everything!
OK, that's just a few general ideas to get you started. Next time around I will cover a couple more specific elements we see in the top selling pictures and a simple trick to be certain you get them right each and every time.
For now, feel free to visit our website and post your own thoughts on what makes a photographer a professional!
About the Author:
Matt Brading is a photographer with GlobalEye Photo Stock Agency who prefers to sell stock photos using the direct contact systems and content-based photo marketing. He also published instant photo web sites using the photo site secrets method.
No comments:
Post a Comment