Try to get the photo right in the camera, rather than relying on post production
Film vs digital…
Many of the world's best shots are done on older cameras (decades old).
Tripods:
Clean them under running water if you’ve been out in dust or salt water
Gimbal head
Carbon fibre, try to make the tripod as light as possible
Smart Phone vs larger camera
The smart phone only has a tiny sensor, you’ll never be able to get the quality you need
Smartphones only save compressed format, not RAW etc
Filters
If using filters, use high quality filters. Even if the lens and sensor are very high quality, if the filter is bad, the shot will be bad.
Neutral/constant density filters are important. Especially if doing sticking.
Polarising filters bring out richer colours, especially between 10 AM and 3 PM outdoors. But they take away some of the crispness from the shot.
Don’t use polarising filters for wildlife etc, you lose a few F stops.
Cleaning (lens / sensor / etc)
High quality microfiber cloths
Camel hair brushes
Visible Air Air Blower (this brand/model has a filter so you’re only pushing clean air onto the surface)
Sensor swabs
Sensor cleaners
Sensor Loupe (a light which highlights whether there’s any dust on your sensor)
Cleaning (exterior)
Air blower
Old (clean) cotton t-shirt (e.g. wipe ocean-spray off the filters / exterior)
Lenses
Wide angle lenses exaggerate space. Near objects become more prominent, they emphasise depth
Telescopic lenses make objects appear to be closer on the same plane, producing a more compressed image
Prime Lens – this is a fixed lens for a specific purpose, does a better job
Zoom Lens – it covers a lot of functionality in one lens, but there are compromises
Fast Lenses with lower F-Stop can be used in lower light, as they let more light in, allowing faster shutter speeds. They are more expensive and heavier.
This is the distance between the sensor and the lens
Larger sensor sizes achieve the same as a lower focal length
Try to use a shutter speed lower than the focal length of the camera, e.g.
20mm = 1/30th of a second
200mm = 1/250th of a second
600mm = 1/600th of a second
Creative blur is OK, but otherwise try to avoid it
Subject movement
Correct shutter speed
Camera movement/shake
Mirror lock-up
Image stabilisation (turn it off when using a tripod)
Test your lenses for their sweet spots, in the field, ensure the focus is correct.
Consider using a camera test chart
Check a few zooms within a zoom lens (e.g. 50, 100 and 200mm
Check every aperture at each zoom level. Some F-Stops will have issues and it isn’t worth using those F-Stops as the photos won’t be sharp
Use manual focus
Turn of image stabilisation and use a tripod
Low ISO setting for maximum sharpness
Use a cable or remote release
Use mirror-lockup if possible
During shooting, try different focal points (e.g on clouds, then see what comes into focus elsewhere)
Use layering to shoot two photos with different focuses etc
A technique taking multiple overlapping images and combining them to produce one final image.
It is useful when the scene you want to capture is wider than your widest lens or when you want higher resolution images
When stitching
Use RAW
Set white balance manually (consistent)
Set exposure manually (consistent)
Ensure the stitching head is level
Overlap images by at least 25% (or more with wider lenses)
Stitch from left to right
Programs
E.g. Photoshop or Lightroom
The software will automagically stitch it together
This is the centre point within the lens between the lens and sensor, which when consistent, makes stitching much easier.
A camera not mounted on the nodal point, will create perspective issues/differences when panning the camera. When it is mounted correctly, you can pan without any depth differences between shots
A stitching bracket allows a camera to be mounted on the nodal point
Lenses are generally not designed to be used at their maximum or minimum aperture (i.e. not fully open, not fully closed)
Fully Automatic:
The only creative input into the photo is the composition and the timing of the picture.
Everything else is looked after by the camera
Automatic mode can’t place any priority on focus / speed / etc
Program Mode:
Camera sets a suitable shutter speed and aperture combination for correct exposure. It takes into account lens, light level, ISO setting and sull dynamically update this combination to reflect any changes in conditions.
If the focal length is increased, a shorter exposure time is set to anticipate any camera shake
This is the most convenient most in transient situations, whena rapid and frequent change of lenses or zooming is required.
Manual Exposure
Shutter speed, aperture and flash are set manually.
Expisure levels can be adjusted by loking at the exposure level indicator in the viewfinder
Manual exposure keeps each shot consistent
Ideal for backlit, high-contrast scenes and reflections, when a light source is in the frame, for low and high-key subjects, for copying and stitching
Aperture Priority
Camera automatically sets the required shutter speed for correct exposure, depending on ISO setting and manually chosen aperture
Flash is activated manually, and when ready, sets a suitable shutter speed for correct fill-flash exposure
Useful for where greater depth of field control is required
Shutter Priority / Tv (Time Value)
Automaticall sets the required aperture to obtain correct exposure, depending on the manually chosen shutter speed and ISO setting. Flash behaves as per Av.
Useful for sports, moving objects, birds in flight, or other moving objects which may be impacted by camera shake.
ISO vs Aperture vs Shutter speed
Aperture provides depth of field
Shutter speed controls blur
ISO controls noise
Also consider Neutral Density filters to slow down moving components (e.g. running water)
Use what you have
Car lights
Torch
Light cubes
Sunrise
Sunset
Sometimes flash will help even lighting in sharp contrast environments (outdoor with sunlight)
Night shots can be ‘painted’ with flash
Reflectors
Black will add shadow
White will reflect white light
Silver, gold etc can add other colour tones
Allows us to focus the viewer on particular areas of the photograph
Fast Lenses are very important for leveraging Bokeh
Yaw / Pitch (Lens stabilisation)
X/Y (Sensor)
Roll (Sensor)
Every sensor has a native ISO speed. Try to find the sweet spot.
If you’re shooting astro / northern lights / etc, find a camera that performs well at 1600 or higher (but preferred, get a lens with a lower F Stop)
JPEG
A compressed format picture. Information is lost.
Highlights and shadows are retained, a lot of everything else is lost
Colour depth is lost, less colour gradients. Using the sRGB colour space, much more limited than the RGB colour space
Most monitors only see the sRGB colour space – only specialised monitors will display the full colour depth
TIFF (Tagged Inage File Format)
Lossless and world-standard image file format
More latitude for corrections than JPEG
Critical for archiving master copies of photos
TIFF Files are good for the master file to print from (but keep the RAW file for further processing/editing later)
RAW (uncompressed Data)
The data can be processed later on a computer
It captures all the data captured by the camera’s sensor
Many creative decisions can be made later
Max image quality
No need to set white balance
Able to change contrast and saturation without image degradation
Able to work on a 16-bit image after post-production
65535 (16-bit) levels of colour, instead of 256 (8-bit) levels of colour
Useful for stitching
Histograms
A simple graph which shows the brightness levels contained in the scene, from the darkest to the brightest.
The left hand side represents black, then tonal through to the whites, showing the densities of pixels at each level
Ensure there isn’t much density on either the right or the left hand side of the graph.
High against the ‘wall’ of the whites is over exposed.
High against the ‘wall’ of the blacks is under exposed
Peaks in the middle provides optimum exposure
Equivalent to signal to noise control for audio signal – don’t want too little, don’t want too much.
Different histogram channels are available too – R/G/B/Y (i.e. show density for each colour)
Highlight warnings – some cameras will show a warning when over-exposed
There is no perfect one-fits-all histogram shape – e.g. if shooting silhouettes during a sunrise, the histogram will show it as over-exposed. Or a sky shot may highlight some details which result in very little blacks.
Auto areas (camera chooses what to focus on) – this can be good
Single Point (in the middle of the frame)
Multi point (auto focus on a selected spot within the frame, non-centred)
Tracking mode (it will track a subject and focus on it, such as a moving animal)
Face recognition
Post-focus (after the photo has been taken)
Auto focus modes
Single-shot auto focus (hold the button half-way, focus, then it will take the shot) - But it will reset after the single photo, there will be a different focus for the next shot)
Flexible (adjusts focus if it detects the focus moving)
AFC (continuously looking for focus)
Focus Lock
Allows you to lock the auto focus, so you can take multiple shots with the same focus
Manual Focus
Avoids hunting (searching for the right focus, and missing the shot)
Focus peaking
Places an outline on the areas of focus
The colour of the peaking can be changed (e.g. if taking a picture with a lot of blue, don’t use blue peaking)
Camera with you and be ready to shoot
Don’t procrastinate, the opportunity could be gone tomorrow
Have your camera with you
Seeing the picture – identify the picture within the picture and wait for the right moment
Be open to what is happening (even if it isn’t part of “your plan”)
Patience (sometimes you need to wait for the right moment)
Passion (gives you energy)
Persistence (keep trying until you get the right shot)
Peace (be a calm photographer, don’t allow the circumstances to pressure you during the shot)
Remember the stories behind the photos
Getting into the zone
Putting the elements together (sometimes you need to place things into place in the scene to create some interesting parts of the picture)
Learning to paint with shape or light. Try something different, use back-light, use side-light use twilight, use different weather conditions etc to respond to circumstances you didn’t expect.
Side-light adds texture to a picture through directional shadows
Soft light can add depth to a picture
Look for textures – leaves, wooden panels, feathers, grass, etc
Always look behind you – there may be another amazing shot which isn’t obvious
Create good working relationships with others – it helps to be polite (ask to use someone’s property for a photo, ask to borrow a boat, etc). You may be surprised how far people will go to help you get a good photo
With digital photography, shoot less photos. With film, there was a cost for each shot, so you were forced to think about each shot. With digital, the cost is low so people shoot before thinking.
Get the shot right in the camera, avoid spending time in post production
Cull the unwanted photos. It is difficult managing large volumes of photos you'll never look at again.
Know the medium you’re working with
Understand your camera
If you don’t understand a particular setting on the camera, use auto-mode
Use some foreground in landscape photography to create some depth
Try different angles (e.g. shooting from higher than the subjects) to create depth, or try from ground level (i.e. not standing).
Reflections – use a pool, puddle, etc. Put the camera right on the surface of the water to get a reflection effect. This creates the butterfly effect.
Shape the picture with light, use shadows to highlight the depth
Use a lead-in, e.g. a Jetty which narrows toward the background, to demonstrate depth through diminishing scale
Use focus to blur the foreground and background, focussing on a single spot in between
Use opposing colours between the subject and the background (e.g. a bright yellow boat against a pink/red/blue background)
Use people or common items to demonstrate scale (e.g. a person standing next to a huge tree)
Separate the lines in a picture to highlight the subject. E.g. if a car rooftop aligns with a cloud, move a metre to the left so there’s separation between the edge of the cloud and the edge of the car
Make sure you’ve got an interesting foreground / subject (shooting just the stars can be boring)
Use a sturdy tripod
Manual focus and exposure
Set camera to f2.8 to f4.0 with ISO1600-3200
Remote cable release
Expose for 15 to 30 seconds
Best with new moon
For circular star trails, shoot towards to polar south
Don’t forget your head torch
Fast lenses!
Find the infinity focus point at dusk (when the temperature gets close to what it will be at night), then tape the focus point
Acclimatise your camera – e.g put it outside before you shoot, so it doesn’t need to warm up or cool down
Try shooting with full moon – with long exposure you can use the moon to light up the landscape
Mount camera on a sturdy tripod
F5.8 or F8 with ISO 200
Lock shutter on bulb
Wait for lightning strike then close shutter
Or - Use a lightning trigger (which triggers a shot when the lightning first occurs)
Or – Lumix – use a 4k burst mode (it will shoot 30 frames before you press the trigger)
Depth of field is not an issue
Use the highest speed possible
Use manual focus
Use the sweet spot (F Stop) on lens
No loose equipment in a helicopter
Doors off helicopter if possible
Ensure the blades and skids are not in shot
Make sure your harness or seatbelt is on
Wear dark clothing to stop reflections
Watch the horizon line, if included
Format the Memory cards on the camera, not on the PC. The Camera will set up the filesystem appropriately and this will avoid possible corruption issues
Ensure you use fast storage on the cameras
Remove unnecessary photos:
out of focus shots
Check for sharp focus on eyes of people or animals
unfavourable facial expressions
unrecoverable over or under exposed shots
Accidental images which don't work
Bad competitions
Corrupt files