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Digital Photography Tips For Beginners 101
Posted July 18th, 2008
So, you’ve finally bought your first digital camera? Congratulations! You’re probably excited and you’re wondering where you could find some digital photography tips to help you great photo results. A good advice, however, to digital photography beginners is that you need to practice. You need to get out there and get those pictures! The earlier you make mistakes, the earlier you’d learn how to really take great pictures. What are the mistakes that photography beginners make? Mistakes on digital photography are natural. Beginners would make mistakes that would waste a lot of shots. So, it is wise to read some digital photography tips that would help you avoid the mistakes that beginners typically make. But what are these mistakes? The whole picture becomes one messy unfocused picture. You’d find different subjects in one photograph. This is not fun to look at. It’s confusing so people would not really want to look at it. Another mistake that beginners usually make is not bothering to create more artistic and focused photos. The picture need not be center-oriented. The goal is to create photos that are good regardless of what angle you look at it and regardless of what side of the picture you stared at. The last mistake of a digital photography beginner is taking pictures without really knowing how to handle the camera properly. They end up with pictures that are overexposed, underexposes or blurry. Digital Photography Tips If you are new to digital photography, here are some digital photography tips that would serve you well as you are learning the craft and developing the skills of creating great pictures:
David Cross is a Photographer and Photography enthusiast who runs the site Hobby Photography, where he also posts regularly about Kirlian Photography among other things.
Posted July 18th, 2008 in Photos by Hannah.
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Tip #11
Read everything you can about photography techniques, especially compositional stuff.
The technical stuff like pixel counts and all that can come later. Practice, practice, practice!