Please help me With Exposure Theory or Instruction
scrapbooker
Banned Posts: 9 Beginner grinner
<table x:str="" style="border-collapse: collapse; width: 303pt;" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="404"><col style="width: 303pt;" width="404"><tbody><tr style="height: 12.75pt;" height="17"> <td style="height: 12.75pt; width: 303pt;" width="404" height="17">Can somebody help me in finding a book or DVD to learn photography something like understanding exsposer of photos.</td> </tr></tbody></table>
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Anyway, there are a number of books recommended by other dgrinners here.
I'd also add Joy of Photography and More Joy of Photography by the editors of Eastman Kodak. Long out of print, but excellent reads full of advice for differing skill levels, and 90% of it is still applicable to digital. You should be able to find both volumes for very cheap. (They pop up at library sales all the time around here, but it might just be my location. )
Bryan Peterson's "Understanding Exposure" is a great book to explain the basics of correct exposure for film or digital photography. Amazon has it, used, for $14 - too cheap not to own one.
I do! Published by Amphoto it is large and in glorious color, and will help make everyone who reads it a better photographer.
I would also suggest a link I wrote a while ago about learning to estimate exposures out of doors without a light meter - this knowledge will help you evaluate whether what your meter is suggesting, is really the exposure that you want for the image you have in mind. Your meter does not really know if your subject is facing the sun or backlit, you do, and this is very pertinent information. Useful for exposure too!
I would also suggest you wander through the links in Andys sticky thread at the top of the Technique forum here as well There is a lot of wisdom tucked away in there, cheap too!!
Good digital imagery really begins at the moment of exposure. So many questions all over the web are how do I edit this image in Photoshop to fix what went wrong when the shutter was pushed. Start with an accurate exposure, and very good things happen. Saves a great deal of post exposure anguish and editing time also!
Welcome to dgrin, scrapbooker!
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Hi Scrapbooker
This website http://www.shortcourses.com is an excellent resource.
The section titled "Using Your Digital Camera" is an online version of the book with the same name. The book is available as an ebook or a paper version.
The advantage of the web version are the 90+ animated examples.
The fellow that created this site has been writing educational materials and textbooks for quite some time. I use an instructor's version of this for my Saturday morning photo classes.
Give it a shot. It's free.
http://georgesphotos.net