Monday, December 27, 2010

New Years 2011 Latest Pictures And Tips

Best picture! In 2011, I swear that I will have better (and more) images. Do you?
With three children who do not coordinate their moods or their desire to take photos - and all are easily distracted - I have little time to prepare a shot. I kind of need each shutter release to tell. Even with digital SLR-class luxury, a bit of effort behind the lens can greatly improve the results of an image.
Here are 11 tips for better pictures of this year.
1. Rule of thirds: it's what you learn in each class of photography and what differentiates a good picture, apart from something that looks like a mug shot / photo of the class. Do not center the subject. Instead, the view is divided into a grid of horizontal and vertical thirds (see the grid on the picture of this post). Keep the interesting part of his shot in areas where the thirds intersect. You'll see the difference in the pictures immediately.
2. Keep the bright lights behind you, the photographer, not behind the subject. Adventures in front of a sunny window? Beside the lamp? Get between them and the camera.
3. Check your fund of strange things that appear to put the head or groin. Watch imaginary floating heads. Then you and the camera move slightly up or down or to one side or the other and the tree that seems to be growing out of the head of your child? It will not.
4. Life Hacks has this advice great to mute the brightness of the flash: a small piece of transparent tape over the flash. Of course, natural light is best but sometimes it just is not enough. The tape will help reduce the back.
5. Tamra Lackey, author of Capturing life through better picture, has the following impressive seven points, including: Make sure the battery is charged, the empty memory card and the camera is close. Let the door if you leave. Or keep it in your car, if it is safe there.
6. Get at eye level with the subject. Unless you are trying to invoke a mood oppressor / oppressed in a kind of artistic statement, forget standing and pointing the camera up high and her husband down to your toddler. Lift the camera, hit the ground. Whatever it takes.
7. Forget what Lackey called the "spray and pray", which is taking off in a series of photos (yay for digital cameras!). Instead, do everything possible for some pictures and then set the camera down. Capturing memories really should not replace them.
8. Working with natural light, and avoid hard you can flash your camera. Turn on all lights for night shots indoors. Come to windows and other light sources (but keep them behind you! N º 2!) ..
9. This next board Lackey, I agree. She says if you take a photo very well set-up that is to endure through the centuries, have the family dress more classic clothing. But styles of glasses and long hair better brand T-shirts off the shoulder or high-waisted jeans never can. I say this whole package the wrong way.
10. Do not say cheese. A joke, get their subjects to speak, but cheese is not enough.
11. Here is my big tip for taking pictures of children: they have an extra camera addict hand. Because when the camera comes out, all younger than 5 years starts to run toward the photographer, "Let me see! We'll see!" Deliver the extra and tell them to keep playing / posing. Sure, the camera will make a cameo addict, but is better than tears, right?
12. Speaking of tears, sure to capture your child in a tantrum or merging at least once. I mean, are terrible now. But there is one chance in a decade that has just found laugh and laugh.
13. Some of the photos are taken by children. They see their baby brother in a different way, I'm at a different level, the strangest things that fascinate. Do not spend a lot on a camera for children, but do yourself a favor and let them be the photographers from time to time.

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