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What's the best photography advice you've ever received?
ОтветитьThese are great tips. The eye searches for a moving subject if there's no any it looks for the focus and if everything is on focus it looks for the contrast. There's also Z and X patterns in regards to how our eyes are looking at a picture.
ОтветитьThank you
Ответитьreally like this intuitive approach. Thanks for the tips!
ОтветитьI totally agree, that this is the best and most intuitive way to compose. I learned this in a one-on-one workshop with Mr. Simon Baxter, a great Britisch woodland photographer and a very contemplative person. It has definitely changed my woodland photography for the better. So, I really propose, that everyone is giving this a try.
ОтветитьThanks Mark. I've been trying to grasp the concept of composition and I keep seeing videos that give me all these rules. This video really simplifies it. Identify what I love and try to capture it.
Ответитьis that Yellow Sony Walkman for realzies? (like it has a mix-tape inside you or someone you love, actually made?)
ОтветитьThank you so much. I believe this is the advice I was looking for. I've never heard another artist explain it this way. I think that just might be the "ah ha" moment you explained. Much appreciated
ОтветитьWhich lens is that you have on the camera?
ОтветитьAwesome advice
ОтветитьIt was obvious, once you say it, but its advice I needed - thank you.
ОтветитьAwesome video. What tripod do you use? Can you send me a link?
ОтветитьThanks, Mark. This is the most useful advice I have heard in a long time.
ОтветитьThank you Mark. Your content is super helpful. I struggle in understanding metering modes especially spot metering. What is the most general metering mode you use in your landscape photography.
ОтветитьHi Mark, I really love your videos, I'm always referring back to them, your very good at explaining in a way that I understand. Quick Question I love shooting panoramic, Do you shoot any? and if you do what size dimensions do you recommend to stay with in? Is there stander size they stay with in or does it matter in case I wanted one to print with out cropping? Anyway Thanks!! and keep up the good work..
ОтветитьThanks!
ОтветитьThank you very much, Mark, for helping to simplify composition. I am in a place of trying to improve the quality of my photographs, especially composition. I have read many articles on composition, and (due to mental illness-caused memory problems), have trouble remembering what I read! Forget about trying to apply it without taking along all the books & magazine articles with me to reference in the field. Yeah, like that is practical! :P But asking what I love about the scene & how do I fit those puzzle pieces together seems simple enough to remember. Also the advice not to rush. Thank you again. I hope you have a fantastic day! :)
ОтветитьThis it what I have been doing subconsciously since I started taking photos, and I have only heard one other photographer emphasize this. When you start to do this consciously it just feel right. Also look through 360 degrees, the light might be doing something interesting behind or above you.
ОтветитьAwesome video. Thank you!
ОтветитьThis really helps a bird/nature photog, tackling a new discipline. Thanks, Mark.
ОтветитьI like ! Simple, but so practicle and making 100% sense.
ОтветитьGood advice - thank you!
ОтветитьI love this advice. It makes so much sense!
ОтветитьReally like the idea of a few technical aspects coupled with intuition and feeling make a better photo. Mix both sides of the brain and we get better results.
ОтветитьThank you.
ОтветитьI have done that from my beginning! I use a digital andI have had a great scene aspect.
ОтветитьHeya. Great video as always. I just have a small correction. I think you're saying salt columns when you mean basalt columns.
ОтветитьI've been a big fan of you but I found just too many clickbait titles.
ОтветитьThis is such a simple and easy concept but so much effective. Thank you for sharing.
ОтветитьThis is extremely helpful Mark. Many times I get on location and see that love what I'm looking and struggle with knowing what to take the shot of and end up just prematurely taking shots. I get back to the computer and realize that I liked this piece of this one shot and loved another piece of another shot and find them to be useless photos. I never took the time to put together the puzzle and ultimately never stopped to think about what it was that I really loved about the scene. So simple yet it makes perfect sense. Thank you!
Ответить💚🙏🏼 From India. Its good enough. I want more explanation about Landscape photography 🌷
ОтветитьExcellent video and advice. We need to optically and mentally ‘see’ the picture before we start taking it. Also take photos of the various elements that have attracted us, as well as the large vista. From this we can create an ‘album’ if you like from all the different parts. Printing these photos is a must and can be put in a physical album, or framed in one of those multi picture frames and displayed in the home to remind us on dull days - which we get plenty of in the UK, what adventures we have had. I continually rotate my home framed photos around the place to keep the mood fresh.
ОтветитьThanks Mark for an enjoyable tutorial and great tips!
ОтветитьGood advice Mark. Thanks
ОтветитьThank you for your advice. Great video!
ОтветитьVery good. Kind of using "first principle" approach. Respect.
ОтветитьA good video, Mark. The one thing I would add is thinking about how different lenses can make different elements look in relationship with each other, just like moving around to get the elements aligned the way you want them, changing to a different focal length can also change the alignment.
ОтветитьI've been trying to find subjects in my landscape photography recently. I think that this video really helps to solidify that thinking. What is the thing that is going to be the main subject of the photo and what elements drive the viewer to it. Previously I was finding amazing locations and trying to fit everything in. Trying to show the scale and beauty of the location. But by thinking about the key subject of the photo it helped me to focus more on my composition and in turn create more interesting pictures!
ОтветитьIf we have the opportunity to cooperate with you, it will be our honor. We have prepared a special ultra-wide-angle lens to help you shoot. If you are interested, please contact me directly
ОтветитьWhat do suggest when photographs in Marina area?
ОтветитьThanks!
ОтветитьGreat advise!! You have to have a photographer's eye, no matter the place your back yard or driving around or on a walkabout somewhere new, you just see it, like a snapper does not! It is like " You never know what you will get in a box of chocolates" First you have to be there, then you have to uncover what you see! I like planning apps for sunrise/sets and weather apps. From the longest day to the shortest day the sun rises and sets everyday in a different location on both the east and west horizon even the moon when full is at a different location all this and you visualize a place and mark it on a calendar and for all year long many places. There are places where the sun will shine through a rock formation every year on a date and you will find Photographers in mass there. It makes for many dreams and plans both day and night. Like a Milky Way in March/April early morning it arcs form south to north looking east with a panorama and finding a thing to center under and in Aug/Sept/Oct it goes vertical before midnight and finding a place to frame over or beside in just the right spot. Seeing colors on a cloudy day like fall/spring with foggy mornings. And you do not need to travel far it is all right in front of you, as a photographer you see it and your photos show it where the non lookers say "Where was that?" You capture time and put in a bottle, put the story on back of prints!
ОтветитьGreat stuff! TY!
ОтветитьYou have Dugger's Creek Falls in you video. Such a hidden gem! Most people only go to Linville Falls not even knowing it is there (much better of a fall as well imo).
ОтветитьYou really are the Bob Ross of photography.
ОтветитьThank you Mark for this video. Lots of nuggets!!
ОтветитьThanks for simplifying the whole composition conundrum for me!!!
Ответить🇨🇦/🇺🇸... DECAAADES ago, I taught photography classes back in Hamilton, Ontario. One point that I would make with my students is that the average person with a camera takes an image from a point 5 to 6 feet off the ground, where they NORMALLY view a scene if they didn't have a camera with them. AS SOON AS you CHANGE the viewpoint to almost ANY OTHER POSITION... without having to do ANYTHING else... it will automatically increase the interest of the image. Crouching.... lying on your belly... climbing up a tree... standing on a picnic table... putting the camera directly up against a wall... ANY change of viewpoint, will increase the interest of the photo! 😃
ОтветитьWhat model camera is that? it's not an aps-c format, it's too big. Do you prefer it over your stills camera? Thanks
ОтветитьGood advice from you, Mark. “ A good photograph is knowing where to stand” A Adams. One could also say something about being “present” when it is time to decide how to make your photo, I.e. drop distractions about all the not important details you had to deal with before the moment of closing the shutter. Your videos are very good and down to earth, thanks!
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