By Mandy Hannah Sanchez


Keep your camera handy when you are on a trip. Use it often. While they may not seem that important at the time, when you get home and start to reflect on your trip, having these smaller memories will be great. You can also take photographs of everyday items from a variety of perspectives.

Make your subject feel comfortable, especially if you don't know them. Many individuals can be suspicious of a photographer's motives. Be friendly and start a conversation, then kindly ask for permission to take photos. Many people need to know that photography is art, instead of an invasion of privacy.

Getting familiar with your camera will help you produce the most interesting and highest quality shots. Devote a considerable amount of time to exploring the instructions and features of your specific camera model.

There are settings on your camera that can increase your shutter speed, making it less likely that your photos will come out blurry. Increase your ISO to do this. What you'll be left with are crisper, cleaner, clearer shots of the moving objects you shoot.

When photographing objects you should get as physically close as you can to the object. When you are at the right distance, your subject will make up the majority of the picture, and the image will be clear. This is especially effective when shooting flowers or other inanimate objects. If you are unable to stand the correct distance from your subject, make use of your zoom lens.

Are you looking to take images of objects that are wet or have a rained-upon look? You can create this effect yourself with a spray bottle that you can mist over the subject to give the appearance of "rain."

When dealing with any kind of landscape subject, you need to make sure that your photos have three very important things. The foreground is closest and sharpest in focus, the middle ground less so, and the background is remote, giving a sense of distance. Most art uses these three factors when producing any quality work. Photography is no different.




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