YEKCIM
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2005
- Messages
- 3,042
Okay, you've got your new dSLR or feature packed digital P&S camera, memory cards and spare batteries, and you're all set for your photo shoot at Walt Disney World, right? Wrongo! That is, unless you have taken the time to study the manual and familiarize yourself with your new equipment.
Many great pictures can be made using "full auto", to be sure. But, what about when the lighting conditions are not just right, or when you want to achieve some unusual effect? What then? Do you pull out the manual, right in the middle of the Magic Kingdom, to read up on how to change the white balance? If you're like me, the manual is back in the hotel room or perhaps still six hundred miles away, at home!
One of the greatest things about digital photography is the ability to experiment with your camera almost infinitely, at zero cost. In film days, experimentation was a costly pursuit, due to film and processing costs. Now, you can zap off dozens of "test" shots at zero cost, get immediate feedback, and just delete them after you have learned whatever it was you were trying to learn.
So, before you head off for that once in a lifetime trip to The World, spend some time reading the manual, playing with the different settings, and becoming familiar with all the adjustments and nuances of your new, precision tool. If you are even remotely serious about photography, I'm betting you will not regret the investment of time.
~YEKCIM
Many great pictures can be made using "full auto", to be sure. But, what about when the lighting conditions are not just right, or when you want to achieve some unusual effect? What then? Do you pull out the manual, right in the middle of the Magic Kingdom, to read up on how to change the white balance? If you're like me, the manual is back in the hotel room or perhaps still six hundred miles away, at home!
One of the greatest things about digital photography is the ability to experiment with your camera almost infinitely, at zero cost. In film days, experimentation was a costly pursuit, due to film and processing costs. Now, you can zap off dozens of "test" shots at zero cost, get immediate feedback, and just delete them after you have learned whatever it was you were trying to learn.
So, before you head off for that once in a lifetime trip to The World, spend some time reading the manual, playing with the different settings, and becoming familiar with all the adjustments and nuances of your new, precision tool. If you are even remotely serious about photography, I'm betting you will not regret the investment of time.
~YEKCIM