Hey guys. Happy new month =) May was a good month, and The D-Photo have made a lot of new friends. I did my best to provide you with as many useful articles to help take your photography, and mine, to a new level. I tried to spread the articles through multiple photography categories such as photography techniques, articles and tips, gear and equipment, and inspiration. I hope you had fun with me and I hope you’ll have even more fun this month. If you have any suggestions or ideas on articles, categories or anything that you think might make your experience on The D-Photo more pleasurable I would definitely love to hear from you through the contact form on...
Read MoreHello and welcome back to the second post in our Digital Imaging Artifacts series. Our first post in the series talked about Image Aliasing & Color Moiré. If you haven’t checked it out yet, you can do so right here. As promised, today we’re gonna be talking about Image Noise. Noise in digital images has always been one of the most troubling dilemmas photographers have to deal with. Noise can be seen as low-frequency irregular arrangements of color patches (as illustrated in the image below), and can also be more bothering if combined with other image color artifacts. Noise in digital photography can be thought of as grain in film photography....
Read MoreToday we’re gonna start learning about various image problems and draw backs that are most associated with digital imaging systems and the whole revolution of digital sensors. I’m going to expand these problems over a series of posts, starting today with Image Aliasing and Color Moiré. Image aliasing occurs when attempting to sample a high frequency signal onto a lower frequency sampling medium. When an exposure is made, the captured scene is sampled on discrete spatial image positions. If the highest frequency in the scene exceeds the sampling frequency of the digital imaging system, aliasing can occur producing evident moiré patterns. Moiré...
Read MoreCreative Commons, or CC, is a nonprofit corporation dedicated to making it easier for people to share and build upon the work of others, consistent with the rules of copyright. It provides free licenses and other legal tools to mark creative work with the freedom the creator wants it to carry, so others can share, remix, use commercially, or any combination thereof. CC provides free, easy-to-use legal tools that give everyone from individual creators to large companies and institutions a simple, standardized way to grant copyright permissions to their creative work. The Creative Commons licenses enable people to easily change their copyright terms from the default...
Read MoreEXIF, which stands for exchangeable image file format, is an image meta data that your camera attaches to every photo that you take, telling you the settings your image was taken with such as, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, and lens focal length settings. This data, now available in most digital compact and SLR cameras, can then be used to figure out what went wrong with your image setting or how your shot could have been made better. This data can also be used as evidence that these images are actually yours (In case someone tried to use them without your permission). How to view your EXIF data? To be able to view your images EXIF data, you first need to download...
Read MoreArt photography shares similar concerns with other photographic industries. The artist must have a product, a market, and a fan base. Many fine art photographers are graduates of national art colleges and universities, and have a thorough background in historical and contemporary conceptual art practice, as well as a vital awareness of art history and theory. The product, the art work, will be driven variously by a commitment to a particular theme or visual perception and may be linked to a particular social observation or critique. The successful artist must find conservators and galleries interested in displaying their work, as well as an audience willing to...
Read MoreIf you are really going to progress as any kind of photographer, in addition to technical expertise you need a strong visual sense (something you develop as an individual through practice and knowledge). This should go beyond compositional rules and picture structuring to include some understanding of why people see and react to photographs in different ways. The latter can be a lifetime’s study, because so many changing influences are at work. Some aspects of reading meaning from photographs are blindingly obvious… Others much more subtle. However, realizing how people tend to react to pictures helps you to predict the influences of your own work – and...
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