jonasv
has no mustache
Good morning,
a friend asked me to learn her the basics of (b&w) photography and help her choosing a camera.
I think I'll start by explaining her some of the technical aspects about the camera and photography (exposure: the relation between shutterspeed, aperture and film sensitivity, but also exposure range; focus; depth of field; focal length; but also primes vs zoom lenses, fast vs slow lenses, autofocus vs manual focus; ...).
Next the photograph itself: rule of thirds and composition in general, the importance of light, visualising a shot, contrast, the importance of light, the importance of light, ... With some hints like not having trees grow out of people's heads etc. I don't really want to 'teach' this part like the technical parts, rather I'll try to show a lot of examples and let her discover it for herself...
Lastly I think I'll explain her the difference between different types of cameras (SLR, rangefinder, and TLR). Not only the technical differences but also the difference in use, where each camera excels etc. I'd let her borrow one or two, give her a few rolls of film, and when she's shot these develop them together. Afterwards she's hopefully made up her mind on what type of camera she wants and I'd help her picking one...
Is there anything else I should do or explain, or is this too complicated already? She's really smart so I don't want to dumbify the technical aspects too much, I think she can grasp it all at once and while it may be a bit boring I do believe it's necessary to get all that from the beginning.
Please share any good weblinks on the basics of photography if you have them! Any other tips, hints?
Thanks!
a friend asked me to learn her the basics of (b&w) photography and help her choosing a camera.
I think I'll start by explaining her some of the technical aspects about the camera and photography (exposure: the relation between shutterspeed, aperture and film sensitivity, but also exposure range; focus; depth of field; focal length; but also primes vs zoom lenses, fast vs slow lenses, autofocus vs manual focus; ...).
Next the photograph itself: rule of thirds and composition in general, the importance of light, visualising a shot, contrast, the importance of light, the importance of light, ... With some hints like not having trees grow out of people's heads etc. I don't really want to 'teach' this part like the technical parts, rather I'll try to show a lot of examples and let her discover it for herself...
Lastly I think I'll explain her the difference between different types of cameras (SLR, rangefinder, and TLR). Not only the technical differences but also the difference in use, where each camera excels etc. I'd let her borrow one or two, give her a few rolls of film, and when she's shot these develop them together. Afterwards she's hopefully made up her mind on what type of camera she wants and I'd help her picking one...
Is there anything else I should do or explain, or is this too complicated already? She's really smart so I don't want to dumbify the technical aspects too much, I think she can grasp it all at once and while it may be a bit boring I do believe it's necessary to get all that from the beginning.
Please share any good weblinks on the basics of photography if you have them! Any other tips, hints?
Thanks!