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HOME | FESTIVALS & STUFF | QUICKSHOTS | CONTACT US PHOTOGRAPH YOUR VACATION LIKE A
PRO OR AT LEAST BETTER THAN YOUR
WERE! - R Furgott |
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In
her 10 years as a professional, Rosanne Pennella has seen thousands of
tourists with their feet cut off, some with telephone poles sticking out of
their heads, and others with faces scorched featureless by the sun. She's no
emergency room physician, though. She's a travel photographer and instructor
who teaches aspiring shutterbugs not to crop off people's feet, to avoid
telephone poles in the background, and not to overexpose in bright sunlight,
among other things. Although
these photo errors may seem comically easy to avoid, look through your own
travel albums and you're likely to see these and more recurring with
disheartening regularity. The
good news is that pro shooters say any holiday snapshot can be improved by
following a few simple guidelines. |
Way too much contrast in bright
sunlight leaves the sky white. |
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Add
some new skills and snapshots can graduate to photographs, and photographs
into art. The
major problem for amateurs isn't that they fail to concentrate on the image
in the viewfinder, it's that they concentrate too much, and on the wrong
thing. "Your mind's eye is only seeing the subject of the picture, but
the camera is seeing everything in the picture," says Bob Krist, a New
Hope, Pa.-based freelancer who was named Travel Photographer of the Year in
2000 by the Society of American Travel Writers. That's
how families end up footless in photos: The shutterbug is so fixed on
Junior's face that the photographer overlooks what is in the rest of the
frame. Pennella, whose clients include Fodors, has a simple reminder that she
calls "border patrol." |
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Before you press the shutter button, look at the borders of your
frame, she says, and ask, "Are you including anything you don't mean to,
or not including anything you do mean to?" Pennella's cure for pole-in-the-head is a reminder she calls
"background check." You've checked the borders, now look at the
background -- is it too distracting? "The best way to improve that is to
move yourself, and see if what is behind the person can be hidden or
eliminated from the picture," says Pennella, who's based in Dallas. While
people often think to move left or right, they often forget that ducking down
or standing on tiptoe may also hide an unwanted element. If all else fails,
you can learn how to obscure the background by forcing it into soft focus. Equally common is a problem Krist calls "psychological
zooming" -- when you think you've filled the frame with your subject,
but that great shot of the Eiffel Tower turns out to be "four-fifths sky
and one-fifth tower," says Krist. "Your brain zoomed, but your
camera didn't. You should move in closer and closer until you feel something
is missing from the picture," he says. Then step back and shoot. That
goes for people pictures, too. "Whatever distance you are comfortable
with, cut it in half," says Pennella. |
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Forgot the old thumb |
But
you also need to cut some emotional distance, says Catherine Karnow of Mill
Valley, Calif., whose work has appeared in National Geographic Traveler. In
too many shots of locals, "the people look uncomfortable, because you
aren't comfortable," she says. Ask permission by smiling and gesture
with the camera. If shooting digital, share the results with your subject.
When they see the picture, she says, they will often relax and volunteer for
more. The
most common composition in amateur photography is a horizontal shot with a
person dead center. "It's the least interesting photograph you can take,
and if you go through a photo album of a trip, it's what you see," says
Pennella. "Use the rule of thirds," she says. "If you think of
your photo as a tic-tac-toe board, it's usually best to place |
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your subject in one of the intersections of the tic-tac-toe board. Not
that you shouldn't ever center, just don't do it without thinking." Also,
vary your angles and don't always shoot from the same standing position, says
Jim Richardson, a freelance travel photographer and gallery owner in
Lindsborg, Kan. , whose photos have been published in National Geographic. Say
you're trying to photograph the action at a club or dance hall. "If you
stand with the camera at eye level, the dancers in front cover up the ones in
back. Stand on a chair -- it reveals more of the scene," he says. |
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Crouching or lying on the ground can make something as unimposing as a
lawn ornament look heroic. If
you have pictures of your family with eyes rolled or strained expressions,
it's because you take too long fiddling with the camera before shooting. A slew
of photographic ills can be cured by learning to use a camera before you
leave on vacation. "I've taken people to Africa on a safari and people
buy a big ol' 500-millimeter lens, and they don't try it out -- not even once
before going on a $9,000 trip," says Adam Jones, a Louisville travel
photographer whose outdoor images appear in Sierra Club calendars. |
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The minimum skills to know before you go include how to focus and
shoot quickly, how to zoom in and out, force the flash on and off, set the
camera for macro close-ups, change background focus and get images from your
memory card to a computer. In the case of Jones's giant lens owner, "Why
not go to the zoo first?" he says. "Just because you have a 500
[millimeter] lens doesn't mean you know how to use it." And always carry
your manual with your camera, just in case. Once
you know your camera functions, you can use some fancier techniques. One that
violates common sense is among the most useful: Use your flash in bright
sunlight and turn it off at night. "People
go out on a bright sunny day, low humidity, white puffy clouds, and say,
'It's a nice wonderful day to get photos of the family.' No it's not. It's
harsh contrasty light," says Krist. The eye can perceive details in a
wider range of light and dark than a camera, which will either burn out the
light areas or lose detail in shadows. |
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The solution, says Krist, is to use the flash in sunlight to reduce
the contrast. "It will open up the shadows and make them more readable
to the chip." At certain times of day, even strong sunlight won't hamper a
photographer. "When the shadow is longer than the subject is tall,
that's what the photographers call 'sweet light,' " says Pennella.
That's the time to break out the camera. And don't leave the camera at home
because it's overcast -- that can be the best time to shoot. Conversely, some of the best night shots are made at twilight without
a flash. "It's the time the exterior light is the same as the interior
light, so you can see both," says Krist. So your camera captures not
only a cafe's facade but also the people inside. |
With just a little effort one photo
is worth a thousand words! |
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When it gets really dark, unless you are taking a close shot, the
flash is useless. "Your flash is not going to illuminate the Eiffel
Tower," says Krist. In fact, turning off the flash will automatically
set many cameras for a timed exposure, the only way to capture a skyline at
night. You may need a tripod, though: Long exposures will blur if the camera
moves. The final step to an improved photo album is to make sure you tell the
story of your trip through variety. "Anyone can stand in front of the
Grand Tetons at sunrise and take a good picture. But it doesn't tell me much
about your experience," says Jones. "You need to show the grand
scheme, the more intimate views and the close-ups." That means your
camping trip should have shots of everything from a panorama of the mountains
to a close-up of fingers on a ledge. Karnow, after 20 years as a pro, still writes down reminders before
each shoot. "I make a list that says, 'People, scenics, details, food,
movement, action, night life,' " she says. You
could start yours with, "Note to self: feet." HOME | FESTIVALS & STUFF | QUICKSHOTS | CONTACT US |
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