Beginner Photographer Common mistakes To Avoid
This tutorial is brought to you by photographer overnight.
Today we're going to talk about common mistakes to avoid as a beginner photographer.
Photography is always a learning process you've got to constantly be trying to improve your work and make it better.
If you're stay tune in this blog, you're already on the right track and trying to improve your work
By gaining tutorials from the beginning of my photography career.
I was constantly educating myself about how to improve whether it was
learning more about using my camera are
learning how to improve pictures with programs like Photoshop and light room
looking over some of my old work and comparing it with my recent stuff really makes me
realize just how far I've come
and I'm sure if you have been in photography for a while you'll notice the same thing so i want to share with you a few of the biggest mistakes I made as a beginner.
So you can avoid making them and also share the most important things i learned along the way that have improved my photography by leaps and bounds when I was just starting out.
I would get going in a photo session and forget to change my exposure when the Sun came out from behind a cloud or when we went into a shade of your area.
If you're shooting like this you'll know what I'm talking about
You'll think you're getting awesome shots and then...
You'll realize there goes the last images when you get home you end up losing a good portion of the pictures to under over exposure and sometimes trying to save them
because you think they're good
And it doesn't really work
There are three huge things you can do to avoid this problem
First
It took a lot of reminding myself to make a mental note
'Every time the lighting changed so i could change with it and regularly check your images after you take them to see if you need to make a change'
The next thing you can do is slow down a lot of beginning
Photographers really know how to pose people so they spend more time just snapping pictures and hoping they'll get some good ones by the sheer quantity from the session.
Take the time to frame your image so that it looks good and pause to tell your subject to do something differently
If it's not quite working
Learn posing tricks from as many sources as you can, and check out other photographers work
to get some ideas you'll find some posing cards at photographer forum
Most often
You'll have subjects who have no idea how to those and aren't going to give you good candidates by just standing there
Learning how to pose them even if you're faking a candidate
Pose will increase the amount of good photos you have to work with
This will also save you from having thousands of wasted images and the wear and tear on your camera will be so much less when you take the time to get a good image in your frame
rather than clicking like crazy.
And finally the most important improvement you'll ever make is to start shooting your images in raw format.
If you're shooting and jpeg you probably want to ignore this advice because it seems so much easier to just keep doing what you're doing and learning a whole new format and having to figure out the whole raw editing process sounds totally overwhelming
But
I can honestly tell you that this was the number one change that improve my wedding photography
And yes I was dragging my feet about switching over but the difference is completely amazing
let's take a batch of images for example
If you have taken these images in jpeg you either have to throw them all away or try to brighten them with Photoshop and have a really grainy final product.
If you take in this same batch of images in raw format you'd be able to change the exposure in such a large spectrum.
You hardly ever have a lighting change big enough to make you lose your images.
So there are some really important things you can do to improve your portrait sessions number
Number one
Pay attention to lighting changes and always check your images after you shoot
Number two
Slow down and frame your image properly
Number three
Learn how to pose your subjects and
Number four
Take the jump and learn to shoot in raw
Hope you enjoyed this tutorial and check
out more of my free tutorials
RELATED:
25 Creative Photography Idea For Amateur Photographer
This tutorial is brought to you by photographer overnight.
Today we're going to talk about common mistakes to avoid as a beginner photographer.
Photography is always a learning process you've got to constantly be trying to improve your work and make it better.
If you're stay tune in this blog, you're already on the right track and trying to improve your work
By gaining tutorials from the beginning of my photography career.
I was constantly educating myself about how to improve whether it was
learning more about using my camera are
learning how to improve pictures with programs like Photoshop and light room
looking over some of my old work and comparing it with my recent stuff really makes me
realize just how far I've come
and I'm sure if you have been in photography for a while you'll notice the same thing so i want to share with you a few of the biggest mistakes I made as a beginner.
So you can avoid making them and also share the most important things i learned along the way that have improved my photography by leaps and bounds when I was just starting out.
I would get going in a photo session and forget to change my exposure when the Sun came out from behind a cloud or when we went into a shade of your area.
If you're shooting like this you'll know what I'm talking about
You'll think you're getting awesome shots and then...
You'll realize there goes the last images when you get home you end up losing a good portion of the pictures to under over exposure and sometimes trying to save them
because you think they're good
And it doesn't really work
There are three huge things you can do to avoid this problem
First
It took a lot of reminding myself to make a mental note
'Every time the lighting changed so i could change with it and regularly check your images after you take them to see if you need to make a change'
The next thing you can do is slow down a lot of beginning
Photographers really know how to pose people so they spend more time just snapping pictures and hoping they'll get some good ones by the sheer quantity from the session.
Take the time to frame your image so that it looks good and pause to tell your subject to do something differently
If it's not quite working
Learn posing tricks from as many sources as you can, and check out other photographers work
to get some ideas you'll find some posing cards at photographer forum
Most often
You'll have subjects who have no idea how to those and aren't going to give you good candidates by just standing there
Learning how to pose them even if you're faking a candidate
Pose will increase the amount of good photos you have to work with
This will also save you from having thousands of wasted images and the wear and tear on your camera will be so much less when you take the time to get a good image in your frame
rather than clicking like crazy.
And finally the most important improvement you'll ever make is to start shooting your images in raw format.
If you're shooting and jpeg you probably want to ignore this advice because it seems so much easier to just keep doing what you're doing and learning a whole new format and having to figure out the whole raw editing process sounds totally overwhelming
But
I can honestly tell you that this was the number one change that improve my wedding photography
And yes I was dragging my feet about switching over but the difference is completely amazing
let's take a batch of images for example
If you have taken these images in jpeg you either have to throw them all away or try to brighten them with Photoshop and have a really grainy final product.
If you take in this same batch of images in raw format you'd be able to change the exposure in such a large spectrum.
You hardly ever have a lighting change big enough to make you lose your images.
So there are some really important things you can do to improve your portrait sessions number
Number one
Pay attention to lighting changes and always check your images after you shoot
Number two
Slow down and frame your image properly
Number three
Learn how to pose your subjects and
Number four
Take the jump and learn to shoot in raw
Hope you enjoyed this tutorial and check
out more of my free tutorials
RELATED:
25 Creative Photography Idea For Amateur Photographer
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