Senin, 19 September 2011
How to get a good photo
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How do I get a good photo. It may be hard pressed to get the answer. because it's a good photo is very relative, in terms of where we judge it. But in general I can explain in the following description. To get a good photograph, there are some things that need our attention. Here I will not write about techniques, equipment used, or the exact location to produce good photographs. Due to the right of the above techniques have different ways for each stream of photography, like landscape, portrait, wild life, and so on. But who wants to be emphasized here is the notion of good and other basic stuff. Here are the things to note:
To be able to produce good photographs, we must first understand what a good photograph it. There's no way we could make a good photograph if we ourselves do not really know what it looks like a nice photo.
The definition of a good photograph is not a verbal definition. There can be no definition could be written that a good photograph looks like. You could swallow a piece of pizza and said it felt good, but you can make a definition, Äúenak, Äù was like what is not?
To understand what a good photo, we can train him to see photos of other people is by flipping through various magazines and photo books.
When we look at sebuat photos and are interested in, make yourself that the picture is good. The proof you are interested in is not it?
Then, look at the photo and then create questions in your heart: why you felt it was interesting. What's so interesting? Whether the color is good, or whether the person in the photo is beautiful, whether the arrangement of objects in the picture was interesting, whether the atmosphere in the attractive photos. Essentially you have to know the reason what makes you feel a photograph interesting.
Once you know what the attraction of a photograph, try to think how to make a photograph. Does the photographer squatting, whether the photographer should take the stairs, whether the photographer about a chat with the object, whether the photographer can lighting lucky like that, and so on.
After the last two steps to go through, you actually already have a stock to create great photos for, which is similar to Äúadegan fot you just observe, Äù. Deposition memory will be a good photo is a stock for you to create a situation similar photos. and the more you watch photos of other people, the more stock for you to be able to make good photographs. This is not menjuplak, but saving ideas. in this world there are no photos that can be entirely new. a photo must be produced from a variety of ideas that exist in the mind of the photographer.
If you already have a digital camera, use it every day. any digital camera brand, shelf life of only about six years. cameras are used every day is much more durable than single-use camera-time only. using a camera every day, you practice well to make good photographs.
To get and can make a good photograph does need a lot of trying, practicing and keep trying with various techniques. Good luck.
World Press Photo Award 2
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World Press Photo of the Year
Jodi Bieber, a South African photographer for Time magazine, won with a photo of Bibi Aisha, a 18-year woman from Oruzgan province in Afghanistan. Aisha's story began when he ran back to his family after complaining of abuse from her husband. Taliban arrived one night demanding that he face justice and brother-in-law while her husband held Aisha cut off his ear and then cut his nose. Aisha left, but later rescued by aid workers and U.S. military. After time in the protection of women in Kabul, he was taken to the United States, where he now lives.
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Arts
and Entertainment
stories, winner of the Second Daniele Tamagni, a freelance photographer who lives in Italy, winning the series The Flying Cholitas, about Lucha sports (wrestling free Bolivia) |
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Contemporary Issues singles, second prize, Ed Kashi of the United States won with a portrait of Nguyen Thi Ly (9 th), who suffered from Agent Orange disability, in Da Nang, Vietnam |
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Daily Life singles,
the first winner Feisal Omar of Somalia shows us a man who brought the shark through the streets of Mogadishu, Somalia, 23 September 2010 |
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Daily Life Stories, winner of the first Martin Roemers of the Netherlands won with themed photo Metropolis, about life in big cities |
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Daily Life singles,
winner of the third Reuters photographer Andrew Biraj, based in Bangladesh, won with fotoini of a crowded train station near Dhaka, 16 November 2010 |
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General News singles, the first winner Riccardo Venturi of Italy shows us the Iron in the Old Market that burned in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on January 18, 2010 |
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Nature singles, winner of the second Dirscherl Reinhard, a German freelance photographer, won with a picture of Atlantic Fish Screen attacking Spanish sardines, from the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico |
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Nature stories, winner of the second National Geographic photographer Stefano Unterthiner from Italy have won with a photo of Whooper swans at dawn, taken in Hokkaido, Japan in January 2010 |
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Nature stories, Winner of Third Another picture of the series Archambault, an active volcano: Mount Bromo in East Java |
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People in the News singles, Winner of First Irish photographer Seamus Murphy won with a picture of Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks, in London on 30 September 2010 |
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Portrait singles, Second Winner Photographer Joost van den Broek, who is based in the Netherlands, won with a photo of cadets on board the Russian Kruzenshtern |
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Portraits Stories, winner of the Second Wolfram Hahn, a freelance photographer who lives in Germany, won with a self-portrait series for Social networking sites |
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Spot News Stories, winner of the Second Corentin Fohlen, Fedephoto a photographer based in France, won this category with a photo of anti-government riots in Bangkok, Thailand May 2010 |