Compelling and Creative Images: Ep. 121: You Keep Shooting: Adorama Photography TVIn this episode, Bryan Peterson goes to a Canadian junkyard and produces three great images. Why does Bryan keep on visiting junkyards? Because he believes they offer a wealth of opportunities for compelling and creative images.
Full guide at: www.dslrtips.com How to take successful photos at night, by Gordon Laing, Editor of www.dslrtips.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5
i love how? cracked out he seems
very good video tho
Thank you Bryan? and Adorama for presenting this. Bryan you never cease to amaze me in your ways of turning trash into gold. Great piece of work for opening the imagination when taking a stroll and shooting photos. Happy New Year 2012 guys.
Pure Genius
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Looks like Junk to me.?
man..quit saying you wrote those books…we all know it? and it’s annoying to hear it every time. just put a link to those books in the video or something
I shoot a fuji S1800 12mp 18x zoom. it has quite a few limitations I am bumping into as? I advance my skill. only a low/high aperture mode (and zoom locked) no hot shoe, fairly slow shooter,(.6 sec shutter/1.3 sec large pic continuous/11 sec flash recycle) only jpeg mode.
My attempts to get a shalow DOF have been poor. (1/2000 to 8 sec) F11 at max zoom
Can you suggest to me what may be a good photographic subject for this type of camera?
ok once you get cool images like that, what do you do with them? do you stock them? make big portraits and sell them at? a gallery? or just stick them in your electronic archive?
Bryan,? you inspire me everyday!
Go? Calgary!!!
This guy? is a genius!
Wow! Bryan? you are amazing! I always learn something everytime I watch you.. Thank You!!
wish i? was this creative
Who says you can’t shoot interesting images at midday? Not BP that’s fer? dern shure!
Another eye opening? video, thanks Bryan.
Bryan is just a? genius!
@fredca09 Amen? to that! Who knew?!
Perfect !?
@conniestofko Bryan is correct? but maybe needs a bit of clarification. The camera’s sensor surface (or, if you’re still shooting film, the film plane) should be parallel to the subject. The shape of the lens makes it seem perpendicular, so I can understand your confusion
Love him?
Brian? you are a true artist! Your creativity never ends.
i just want to go out and shoot because of this. Keep up? the good work!
this man? is inspired by garbage :O
good tips once again. anyone else find it a bit odd that he is in a junk yard in Calgary? it’s not? the junkyard part, it’s the fact he’s in Calgary. “Lets take a trip to an Alberta junkyard, hmm… i think Calgary would do best.” Bryan Rocks!
Wow….again. ?
where are my bad audio rants?!?
)
one of the best informative video on youtube…very useful…you? rock. thanks
personally I like his voice?
@MrGarnet66 You’re? welcome! DOn’t forget to visit dslrtips . com for more information!
Thank you for your professionalism. I really like your lessons.?
zz?
@ohthatscassie Thanks! Er, presuming you’re not taking the piss that? is!
i like his accent hahaha?
i found information of the? upcoming D4 and D800 from here:
canonandnikonnews.blogspot.com/
I? like your teeth
@nightubble go to ebay and get yourself? a tripd for night photography. It makes a huge difference. but as nightubble was saying you could use pretty much any surface to balance your camera but with a tripod you can pretty much take a picture wherever you want.
this camera beast!! i use? most for time-lapse photography. i just need to trigger it with this little remote: TEMPUS. works with MEX 5, 5N and 7. website at: tempus.bymac.org
this camera beast!! i use most for time-lapse photography. i just need to? trigger it with this little remote: TEMPUS. works with MEX 5, 5N and 7. website at: tempus.bymac.org
@nightubble You’ll need somewhere steady to balance your camera to avoid shake? in long exposures. A tripod is designed to do that, but you could equally balance your camera on a wall or post or even on top of a coat or bag. That’s what I do.
I’ve always wondered, is a tripod essential? for taking night photos ? :O im new
wait a minute… aren’t you that guy from SMBC? theater?
a very big Thank YOU for you
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@strawbongwae Maybe go for? a bridge instead of a compact?
I am selling my nikon d60 on? ebay only 18 hours left Ebay Item Number 150707940635 check out the listing not long till bidding ends!
tomorrow morning I’m going to the top of a great hill, here in Victoria, B.C., just before sunrise (golden hour) and going to attempt to capture a gorgeous sunrise. Than, at night, just before sunset, I will go to another hill, mount? tolmie, to be exact, and expose for a fantastic sunset. I just had to share this ’cause it gets me very excited and makes me happy!
@andykbh That got? to me too! once you go manual, you don’t go back to program mode, ever!
owww I thought I had to use a small? aperture number (ex f 12) but I guess that’s only for landscape photos… Ok so tripod, low ISO, wide aperture, then play with shutter speed!
@strawbongwae You’re welcome!? The TZ18 / ZS8 is also a great choice. As for my reviews, it sounds like you’ve already found them, but everything I do is published at cameralabs . com – only a few things make it onto Youtube here…
@cameralabs Yes yes, that all makes sense – thanks for the explanation.
Canon S95 you say? I had looked at that and contemplated it may be a little more than I was hoping to spend initially. I do like the look of the Lumix TZ18, I read through your review? earlier today, seems like it would have everything I was looking for as a beginner.
Anyway, thanks for the reply! Sure I will be tuning in to more of your videos in the future.
@strawbongwae Yes, doubling the ISO will let you use a shutter speed twice as fast, so if you? keep increasing it, you might reach a shutter speed that’s fast enough to handhold. But if the conditions are still too dark, you may not, especially if you have also chosen a bigger f-number to increase the depth-of-field. Also, with every doubling of the ISO, your image quality will get worse, especially with a compact, so I’d always recommend choosing a low ISO. PS – try the Canon S95 or S100
Thanks for the effort put into these tips @cameralabs ! I’m wishing to get into photography a little and think I will start with a compact digital that gives me a certain degree of control. (recommendations welcome)
Just briefly (open to anyone who can advise), what would have been the difference above in just using a higher ISO? Am correct in thinking the higher the ISO the quicker the shutter speed can be? Thus if you were shooting moving objects at night would you go high? ISO fast s.s?