Check out these devices to transfer your digital pics; learn about and how to use professional photography equipment in this free video on being a pro photographer.Duration : 0:1:45
Check out these devices to transfer your digital pics; learn about and how to use professional photography equipment in this free video on being a pro photographer.Duration : 0:1:45
It used to be that professional photography was a tough world to break into. It still is, but now, with the advent of digital photography, the quality of photography that’s achievable by amateur photographers is at least improving.
Today’s professional photographer uses many of the same tools used in amateur photography, and digital photography has now grown to the point that you can get every model of camera, from a traditional, professional-feeling 35mm SLR to a more relaxed point-and-shoot. Each of them has the capability to make any amateur feel like a real professional.
Storing photographs in digital form also allows a much wider range of manipulation: things like color balance, cropping, and even turning photography into painting can be achieved by digital means. You can achieve such stunning effects as turning your color photography into black-and-white photography. Professional photographers would traditional change film for that effect. Like the aged-photography look of a nice sepia-toned piece? One push of a button on a digital camera can get you that effect in a split second, and without the years it takes to achieve that nice patina of age.
Likewise, correcting mistakes: Red eyes making your photography look less than professional? Digital can fix it. Shutter speed a little too slow on that last, once-in-a-lifetime shot? Digital sharpening can fix that problem, too. And finally, the mother of all mistakes: everyone’s eyes are closed, your mother-in-law has a grimace on instead of a smile, and your wife looks like she’s yawning instead of laughing? Erase it. Start over. Professional photography digital can handle it.
They say the Internet has made the world smaller, and digital photography has a part in that, too: sharing your budding photography skills with your friends is easier with digital, even if you’re not about to go professional. Just send an attachment with your e-mail, or even a link to your latest digital masterpiece, and everyone you know will be able to appreciate your work. And almost no one will be able to tell that you doctored up the background and fixed Aunt Martha’s red eye.