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The Learning Curve
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The Learning Curve (Weird Science, 1996).iso
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functions.txt
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1996-06-14
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WHAT CAN A CAMERA DO ?
----------------------
Just what can a camera do ? Have you, the keen photographer,
bought a state of the art camera, and probably a few lenses just
to use it on the program setting all of the time ?
If you have, you`re missing out - not to say wasting your hard
earned cash. The fact that you are looking at this tutorial
almost certainly means that you have a camera, or are considering
buying one, that is capable of more than just being pointed at a
scene and making a faithful reproduction of it.
Even compacts, and especially zoom compacts, usually have
settings other than plain auto. It may be possible to use a
backlight button to increase exposure, or manually switch on the
flash on a bright sunny day to provide fill in lighting. Do you
ever do it ?
Modern Single Lens Reflexes - SLR`s - have many modes and
capabilities. Even the bottom of the range versions can usually
do far more than shoot only on auto. As you go up range, the
camera becomes a very sophisticated machine indeed. It can also
be switched to manual and the REAL skills be learnt. In most
cases, many of the auto features can still be used, under your
control, in manual.
The picture then becomes YOUR creation, not that of some
programmer in Japan.
USING THIS SECTION ........
Whilst this 'chapter' does not claim to cover every possible
topic, it does deal with the features common to most cameras and
gives some idea of what they can be used for. Remember - many of
these features can be used in conjunction with each other to
achieve a vast number of possible effects.
It is always wise, even for an experienced photographer, to study
the instruction manual with the unloaded camera in the hand. Try
out each function with an empty camera and see how it works.
Decide what will be of most use and learn the method of switching
that function on and off, if possible, with the camera to your
eye.
If you become very serious and even begin to aspire to selling
your work, you MUST understand your trade. Should you add medium,
or even large format cameras to your outfit, you will quickly
find that most of these are still very manual indeed to use.
If you do not understand film speed, apertures, shutter speeds,
depth of field etc. - you will never produce results to compare
with the professionals - never mind beat them ! And with a
mastery of your gear, and some imagination in subjects, they CAN
be beaten at their own game.