Hang on tight:
Keep the camera strap around your neck. By keeping the camera carrying strap around your neck or over your neck and one shoulder you'll avoid dropping it. Even if the camera slips off your lap to the ground, say 18", it can cause damage. An SLR mirror assembly is a delicate part. When you pass your camera to another place the neck strap around their neck and remove the camera when you want it back.

Film Washer:
A large coffee can makes a lab quality film washer for 35mm and 120. Pound down sharp edges in the open end. Drill three 1/16" holes in the bottom and paint. After fixing, keep the film on reels and place it in the can. Allow water to flow in the top and keep the water above the reels. The rate of water through the wash system can be regulated by adding holes or partially.

Safe Camera Bag:
To avoid camera bag theft, stow your gear in a diaper bag. They have compartments for bottles that can be used for lenses. There are other small compartments, too. The bags come in many sizes, often are padded and some are insulated. I promise nobody will steal it!

Save Lab cost:
Composing and cropping a subject in the viewfinder, along with proper lighting, can save you a bundle of money in lab costs.

Keep your film Cooler:
Pick up an extra window sun shield at your local automotive store. When traveling in hot weather, cover your camera bag and notice the difference in how it feels. Of course you would use the silver foil type. Even with AC in the car the sun through the window gets warm. Also, it makes a great in a reflector for a photo shoot.

Personalize Your Photo's:
Personalize your travel pictures. The Acropolis is awesome and so is the Great Wall of China. It's difficult to get significantly different pictures from those taken over the last 150 years, unless you put your spouse in them. It helps to have an interesting subject to reflect upon. This is true for just about any place you go on this planet.

Heads and Feet:
Don't cut off their feet. Don't mar your pictures by concentrating too strongly on faces. Not only beginners, but pros also leave too much head room above their subjects and cut off their feet. Frame the entire subject by adjusting your zoom lens to a wider setting or by stepping back a few feet if you have a fixed focal length lens.

Get a Good Grip:
Hold on to the camera, when you push the shutter release does not move the camera down with the shutter.

Steal a Good Shot:
Steal shots. When a photographer is setting up a shot with a model, arranging a backdrop or preparing for a photograph on location, take pictures of his or her setup. It may not be in good taste, but you'll get the shot.

Excerpted from:
PhotoSecrets San Francisco and Northern California.
Copyright 1997 PhotoSecrets Publishing. All rights reserved.

Photographs of fireworks

Photographs of fireworks are spectacular, colorful, and fairly easy to do once you know the tricks. For best results, you will need: an SLR camera, tripod, cable release, 1-2 rolls of film, a long lens, and plenty of patience.

Since you don't know exactly when the fireworks will explode, and you are aiming to capture their trails, you will need to hold the camera shutter open for 2-30 seconds. Compact cameras don't offer this long exposure feature so you will need an SLR camera with a manual exposure mode called 'Bulb' (often marked 'B').

To get sharp images, you must keep the camera perfectly still. Propping your camera on a wall, car-top or table may suffice, but nothing beats a good, solid tripod. You'll also need a cable release to activate the shutter without touching and moving the camera.

Despite the low light, the best film is actually slow film as it holds stronger colors. Use 50 or 100-speed print film or, if you want to publish your results, a 50 ISO slide film.

Waterfront settings are good as you can include the reflections of the fireworks in your shot. Cityscapes, landmarks, or people add context to the shot, but remember that they'll come out as silhouettes, so don't include faces or other details. High viewpoints, upwind from the smoke, are usually best. Get there early to secure your spot and select a lens (usually a telephoto) that will fill the frame with trails. Use the first burst to focus the lens (don't rely on your 'infinity' setting).

To photograph the fireworks, open the shutter, wait for some bursts, then close the shutter. That's it! Shoot off a whole roll of film to get a few good shots. Try different apertures (f8 is the safest) and different zoom settings. Include only a few bursts to fill up the frame; too many will look messy. To reduce the effect of street lighting, cover the lens between bursts with your hand, a black card, or a black cap.

Looking for a truly spectacular shot? You can double-expose your film to include the full moon with the fireworks. Shoot a full roll of film of your subject (moon or fireworks), then rewind the film and re-use it to photograph the alternate subject.

 

Photo Secrets San Francisco and Northern California.
Copyright 1997 Photo Secrets Publishing. All rights reserved.

 



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