| Genres: | Documentary, Special Interest |
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With Fundamentals of Photography, you'll learn everything you need to know about the art and craft of great photography straight from Joel Sartore, a National Geographer photographer with more than 30 years of experience.
Designed for people at all levels, this is an engaging guide to how photographs work and how to make them work better for you.
What makes a photograph iconic? What three things must every picture have to stand out from any old snapshot? These two questions form the core of Mr. Sartore's introduction to photography. You'll also discover that a great picture doesn't rely on equipment - but on being able to see and think critically about your surroundings.
To take a picture, you need to have good equipment. Here, get a no-nonsense guide to finding photography equipment - including cameras, tripods, and camera bags - that fits your needs. Also, take an in-depth look at a camera's controls and settings for everything from aperture to shutter speed to ISO (your film's sensitivity to light).
According to Mr. Sartore, lenses are the most critical tools of photography. Here, he takes you into the field and shows you different lenses in action. Among them: 70-200 mm (good for blurring out distractions), rectilinear lenses (great for photographing things with minimal distortion), and wide-angle lenses (perfect for landscapes and for shooting in tight quarters).
Your camera's shutter speed controls how much light enters the lens in a shot. Learn how to become a master at working with this critical tool of photography. You'll discover when to use fast or slow shutter speeds, study each speed's unique effects, and uncover different techniques - such as panning and ghosting - that can add great artistic touches.
What do numbers such as f/1.4, f/2.8, or f/16 mean? Finally make sense of your camera's aperture settings, which can help create eye-popping visual effects and solve specific compositional problems. Then examine some of Mr. Sartore's acclaimed work to see the dramatic relationship between aperture and a photograph's depth of field.
In this first look at one of the two building blocks of photography, learn how to tap into the power of ambient light, which isn't created in a studio but is found around you. Look at how you should adjust your camera to make the most of found light, and learn the best kind of ambient light to shoot in and why. Explore front lighting, hatchet lighting, and even zebra lighting.