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Digital Photos in The Colder Months
In winter we are used to facing cold days and heavy snows. And winter brings another thing: an unusually white background for digital photography frames. But the most important thing is to feel good; it’s essential to be comfortable while you’re photographing, if you are in front of the subject of your photographic life and all you can think of are your wet shocks, the pain in your ear and how nice a hot tea would feel right now, then the picture is ruined. It’s winter and you are about to photograph nature scenes in the heart of mountains or winter sports in full nature, so you must wear warm clothes. It’s better to wear several stratus of clothes because the inside temperature will be maintained at constant values for a longer time. Lastly, do not forget that a huge amount of heat is lost in the head area, so forget fancy hairstyles and wear a warm hat.
remember to wear proper boots and be careful not to have frozen hands. The gloves must not be too swelled. Of course you can’t manipulate your camera if you can’t feel you hands, but did you try to manipulate it with gloves that have just one finger? It might be fun, but also annoying, trying that. try to imagine the scene you are about to photograph in your head and when you are ready to take the picture, watch the small camera LCD and take off the gloves quickly and briefly, just to push the button. This way you can do everything with gloves, except for the final part when you have to push the buttons on the camera, and then for a brief few seconds you can take the gloves off and take the wanted pictures.
Every digital photography device usually has a good temperature tolerance, but when it comes to temperatures below 15 degrees Celsius, things could go seriously wrong. Most plastic parts that compose the camera do not maintain the same durability when temperatures go too low and might easily brake. Battery changing on such cold days while outside should be done with extreme care, because even breathing vapors could turn to moist inside the battery compartment and produce an irreversible reaction The same thing goes for memory cards: avoid changing them. You realize, of course, that the battery story applies to memory cards as well.
Another issue about winter days is the bright snow that can get the auto function of your digital photography device all screwed up. The subject should be exposed as 18% grey, but if the camera thinks a subject is extended and confounds the snow with something else, then you might turn up having photos in witch your beautiful white snow is … grey and dirty . And use your flash to give extra light exposure, even if snow seems bright enough to your eyes. snapfish
AN AMERICAN FAMILY: Three Decades with the McGarveys (National Geographic)
WASHINGTON (Oct. 1, 2009)--In 1977 photojournalist Pam Spaulding set out to
record the unscripted, everyday life of the McGarvey family of Louisville, Ky.
They had just had their first baby, and the project -- to document the lives
of new parents -- was supposed to last one year. Thirty years, two more
children and one wedding later, the project finally came to an end. The result
is the richest photographic record of a single family ever made. This unique,
revealing and engaging group portrait is showcased in a new book from National
Geographic, **AN AMERICAN FAMILY: Three Decades with the McGarveys** (National
Geographic Focal Point; Oct. 20, 2009; ISBN: 978-1-4262-0504-0; $35;
hardcover).
Whether you think of it as the ultimate in time-lapse photography or a reality
show begun decades before its time, this intimate, 30-year look at one middle-
class family is Americana at its most evocative. The remarkable collection of
images peers into every aspect of the McGarvey family's life to produce an
album that is instantly recognizable to anyone who has ever shared the
American experience.
From listening to a bedtime story to decorating the Christmas tree, from
playing a card game around the kitchen ...
Background Variety: Ep 116: You Keep Shooting: Adorama Photography TV
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