f/stopblues
photo loner
I have a friend who recently has been asking me to show him the ins and outs of photography. He's starting from absolute scratch and doesn't even have a camera outside of his microscopic digi-cam. There's no concept in his mind of exposure, composition, etc etc. I get the fun task of kneading him into a good photographer!
I'm thinking of taking the approach of visualizing what you're photographing first, concentrating on subject matter and composition.. probably stressing to shoot what catches *his* interest, not what others would like or what he saw in magazine X and website Y. Developing that sense of "seeing" things in your environment.
After a bit of that and getting comfy with his new tools, then I thought it'd be a good time to introduce the basics of exposure and how to make it work for you toward what you want on the print. I figure after those two key things he'll start experimenting more and learning the rest for himself. The goal of going in this order is to concentrate on the strength of the image instead of worrying if you need to use exposure compensation, if you're going to get flare, if this lens is going to make her nose look big, etc etc.
Finally, I think its really really important to look at other people's work and know why one photo is good and another isn't so great. I think you can learn a ton from seeing a broad range of photog styles and effects. That's still one of my most important resources for my own skills!
You guys think this is reasonable? Part of me thinks it's better to get the technical side down first, but I hate to get him locked into worrying about that all the time and not enjoying it. Thoughts?
Thanks as always!
Chris
I'm thinking of taking the approach of visualizing what you're photographing first, concentrating on subject matter and composition.. probably stressing to shoot what catches *his* interest, not what others would like or what he saw in magazine X and website Y. Developing that sense of "seeing" things in your environment.
After a bit of that and getting comfy with his new tools, then I thought it'd be a good time to introduce the basics of exposure and how to make it work for you toward what you want on the print. I figure after those two key things he'll start experimenting more and learning the rest for himself. The goal of going in this order is to concentrate on the strength of the image instead of worrying if you need to use exposure compensation, if you're going to get flare, if this lens is going to make her nose look big, etc etc.
Finally, I think its really really important to look at other people's work and know why one photo is good and another isn't so great. I think you can learn a ton from seeing a broad range of photog styles and effects. That's still one of my most important resources for my own skills!
You guys think this is reasonable? Part of me thinks it's better to get the technical side down first, but I hate to get him locked into worrying about that all the time and not enjoying it. Thoughts?
Thanks as always!
Chris