Vacation Photos ! »
By Ed Snyder on Jun 24, 2008 in Tips for Beginners, Cameras and Gear, Composition Tips | 0 Comments
Read digital photography tips for beginners including articles on how to buy a digital camera, how to take better pictures, and how to edit your pictures with photo-editing software.
Category: Composition TipsBy Ed Snyder on Jun 24, 2008 in Tips for Beginners, Cameras and Gear, Composition Tips | 0 Comments
By Ed Snyder on May 20, 2008 in Composition Tips | 0 Comments
Nothing provides new photographic opportunities better than a change of scenery. If you can’t afford a trip abroad, then a change of season will do. Springtime in the Northeastern United States is a good example. With azaleas, dogwoods, and cherry blossoms in bloom, the world just looks like a better place! And why not capture it in photographs? Read the rest
By Ed Snyder on Feb 26, 2008 in Featured, Tips for Beginners, Composition Tips | 0 Comments
What IS this creature? And why would someone hold it? Regardless, it makes a fine photo, don’t you think? One of the most common things to do with a camera is photograph your pet. And if you don’t have one, shoot someone else’s pet. Pet photography is easy on one hand, yet difficult on the other. Read more to see why. Read the rest
By Ed Snyder on Feb 13, 2008 in Photo of the Week, Featured, Tips for Beginners, Composition Tips | 0 Comments

This is one of my favorite photographs, a study of a statue of Eros and Psyche (Eros is kind of like a grown-up Cupid). Since I’m posting this around Valentine’s Day, I thought it an appropriate image for discussing statuary photography. The statue is a copy of the famous Antonio Canova sculpture, one of which resides at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. The one I photographed was atop a tomb at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood California. If you like angels, a good place to shoot them is in a cemetery (pun intended).
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By Ed Snyder on Jan 15, 2008 in Photo of the Week, Privacy and Legal, Featured, Composition Tips | 0 Comments
What the heck is this a photo of? Some sort of Photoshop digital montage? Actually, no, it’s a straight image I shot out my car window one morning last week! Ever consider keeping your camera at the ready on the front seat of your car? Read on to learn more about drive-by shooting!
What are the compositional elements of this photograph?
I made this image out the side window of my car while waiting for a light to change. The horizontal legs are part of a stationary statue, and these occupy the upper third of the frame. This helps us meet our compositional goal of the “Rule of Thirds.” The ladder truck and pedestrians helped balance the composition by placing themselves in the lower two-thirds of the frame! I happen to like the way the more distant pedestrian is slightly blurred—this gives a bit of depth to the image. Was there luck involved here? Of course. But you have to be well-practiced in the art of drive-by photography in order to take advantage of such situations. Read the rest
By Ed Snyder on Dec 27, 2007 in Photo of the Week, Tips for Beginners, Composition Tips | 0 Comments

Concert shots look so easy when you see them in magazines, don’t they? Try to take one and you’ll see what the artist Georgia O’Keefe meant when she said, “The cliffs over there, you look at it and it’s almost painted for you, you think until you try.”
If you walk away from this article with one thing let it be this: Cameras need light in order to record an image. The less light there is, the more difficult time the camera will have.
Getting a good concert shot is all about the lighting.
However, you must choose between flash and available light. Let’s explore both. Read the rest
By Ed Snyder on Dec 3, 2007 in Photo of the Week, Featured, Tips for Beginners, Composition Tips | 0 Comments
Happy Holidays! Christmas lights are very tempting to us photographers, aren’t they? Unless you have a “Xmas Lights” setting on your digital point-and-shoot, how are you going to make a photo like this?
First of all, you need to find a photo-worthy scene. This image was shot in Love Park (in front of City Hall) in Philadelphia. The Robert Indiana “Love” sculpture is a favorite destination photo site for tourists. Each year when they put up the 50-foot decorated tree behind it, the whole scene bursts into life! That is, at night. During the day it’s kind of mediocre. So how to photograph it at night? Read the rest
By Ed Snyder on Nov 27, 2007 in Tips for Beginners, Composition Tips | 0 Comments
Black and white? Who would ever want to photograph a richly colored Autumn leaf in black and white? (That’s a rhetorical question). There was something about the way this wet maple looked the other morning on the hood of my car that just screamed “Monochrome!”
By Ed Snyder on Nov 15, 2007 in Photo of the Week, Featured, Composition Tips | 0 Comments

Someone asked me the other day, “How can you get great contrast in a color photograph?” My answer was (and still is), “Sunny day and bright, fully saturated contrasting colors.” Short of that, you’re going to have to do a lot of work with a photo editing computer program.
It’s quite easy to get great contrast in a black and white photograph, provided the image is made up of mostly black blacks and white whites (not innumerable shades of grey between). Upping the contrast is generally very easy to do with photo editing software, your main concerns being 1) loss of shadow detail and 2) burning out the highlights. Color is a bit more difficult, what with there being all those, uh, colors. When you stop and think about it, its kind of unusual to see much naturally occurring contrasting color. Perhaps this is why we find deciduous leaves so much more interesting in the Fall than at other times of the year! Read the rest
By Ed Snyder on Nov 5, 2007 in Photo of the Week, Featured, Photo Editing, Composition Tips | 0 Comments

People portraits are tricky. What’s key to a successful one? Well, aside from technicalities, its all about respect and interest. Respect your subject and show interest in who they are and what they do. You’d be surprised how many people will let you photograph them!
I shot this image in a thrift shop. A very photogenic couple was testing out a sofa and I was hunting for people portraits for a book I’ve since written. I told them they looked great together and asked if I could photograph them for the book (it always helps the creative process if you carry your camera everywhere!). They gladly agreed and I came away with a great shot and an introduction to the band “Sunsplit,” in which the couple play. Read the rest