
wow! thank you very much
basically just taking lots and lots of pictures over the years. having kids helps tremdously, but i treat it more as an excuse to take more photos.
the class that i did take focussed on the technical aspects - f16@125, etc. and darkroom technique. we now live in an age where technology helps make up for being technically innaccurate. our cameras have auto-focus, light metres, 'green box' settings, adjustable ISO, and so on. if i take a technically bad photo - slightly underexposed, blown highlights, crooked horizon, mis-framed, etc., i can use post processing in a similar fashion to darkroom to correct it.
what they didn't teach me in class, and it's the aspect most people i deal with are primarily interested in is the artistic vision side of photography. personally i don't think it's something you can learn in class. but it's the one thing every single one of us can easily learn and discover for themselves that they truly possess very strong artistic talent. for me, it's taken several hundred thousand photos and i'm still learning new things - by trying and failing. i also know what looks good to me and most often that's the best approach to pleasing others.
my father was a good photographer, as are all three of my sisters, but my mum would have her finger in 3 out of 10 shots she took

. the point where i think i really began to enjoy photography is when my father gave my little sister (CarolC) and i a 110 camera and we spent the day taking b&w pictures of 2 stuffed dogs 'on an adventure'. Carol - remember that?
the camera i use doesn't have 'Auto' settings - just modes like AV, TV, and manual. i learned a lot about composition by using a prime (fixed focal length). hire one or force yourself to not use the zoom and use your feet to recompose.
again, thanks for your comments. it really means a lot
