Vacation Snaps
Vacation Snaps
Vacation snaps
tips;
Shooting great vacation photos, even with that new digital
camera, takes
smarts and know-how. To help you make the most of your digicam on your
next holiday, Microsoft Home
Magazine asked top photo gurus for their
professional tips.
Badly taken vacation
snaps can be awfully disappointing, but good ones are a lifelong treasure.
Not only that, they’re easy to post online so you can share your best
shots with family and friends.
Vacation Snaps Tips
1: Power up
-
Learn to manage
power — dead batteries ruin great photo ops. Always take two sets of
batteries and a charger, says Jorge DaSilva, manager of Henry’s School
of Imaging in Toronto. Use one set in the camera while the other
charges.
-
Or, invest in a
super-long-lasting, clip-on, rechargeable lithium ion power pack,
suggests photo instructor Larry Frank, a senior product specialist at
Toronto-based photo wholesaler DayMen Photo Marketing Inc.
-
Find out what kind
of power adapter you need for foreign locations — possibly a
transformer, more likely just a plug adapter — and get it before you
leave, says Vancouver-based freelance nature and travel photographer
Danny Catt. If you can’t tell what you need from the camera’s manual,
ask the retailer who sold you the camera.
Vacation Snaps Tips
2: Protect your gear
-
Digicams are very
susceptible to water damage. After one of Catt’s cameras got a little
damp in British Columbia, “it was toast,” he says. Stay away from water
and carry your camera in a waterproof bag.

-
Add a pack of
silica gel to reduce moisture further, DaSilva suggests. You can buy one
in camera stores.
-
When going through
airport security, put memory cards in the plastic tray provided to avoid
x-rays, metal detectors or anything with a magnetic field.
Vacation Snaps Tips
3: Pack enough memory
-
The camera’s
manual should tell you how many shots at a given size and quality you
can store on your memory card. Use this information to calculate the
storage required for each picture; then multiply by the number of
pictures you expect to take.
Hint: Biggest size = highest resolution for making jumbo print
enlargements.
-
Conserve by using
lower resolution for shots you know you’ll only want to print small or
e-mail, says DaSilva.

-
Buy all the
storage you need — and maybe a little more — before you travel, Catt
says, so you can be sure it works.
-
Exploit your
digicam’s greatest feature: edit as you go. Delete shots that don’t
work. Hint:
Take the camera’s AV (audio-visual) cord and plug it into a hotel-room
TV to get a better look at the pictures. If you travel a lot, get a
camera that has playback for different television systems around the
world.
Vacation Snaps Tips
4: Know your camera
The nice thing about
digital cameras is that you can shoot as many images as you like. Still,
try to anticipate the shot. Then, check the display to make sure you got
it. If not, shoot again.
-
When setting
exposure, if in doubt, err toward underexposure (too dark), Frank
advises. Overexposed digicam shots are prone to burn-outs — bright parts
of the picture are rendered as pure white.
Hint: Avoid shots
that include the sun, Catt says.
-
Understand and
exploit creative manual options, Frank says. “Use a fast shutter speed
to stop action, for example, or a slow shutter speed to create a
pleasing blur when shooting a waterfall or something with implied
movement.“

-
Also understand
and exploit advanced digital features, Catt urges. Many digicams help
you shoot pictures you can “stitch” into panoramas. Most will also apply
special effects — black and white, sepia tone, polarization.
“Sometimes you have to think outside the photographic box,” he says.
Vacation Snaps Tips
5: Compose carefully
-
Make the main
subject BIG, says Frank. “Assume your audience has the attention span of
a three-year-old.”
-
More often than
not, avoid placing your main subject dead centre. Imagine a tic-tac-toe
grid overlaying the picture frame, DaSilva suggests. Try to place the
subject at one of the grid’s intersections.
-
When shooting
landscapes and sunsets, Catt says, decide which is pictorially more
important: land or sky. If land, place the horizon in the top third of
the picture; if sky, place it in the bottom third — seldom in the
middle.

-
Look for natural
frames in the scene to better compose the main subject, Da Silva says —
a church spire framed by the arches of a cloister, for example.
-
Look for lines in
the scene, Catt suggests — a road or footsteps in the sand — and try to
frame the picture so the lines lead the eye from the left toward your
main subject.
Vacation Snaps Tips
6: What to shoot — and
when
-
Shoot more often
in the half hour to two hours before and after sunrise and sunset. The
low-angle light at these times produces dramatic and pleasing results,
says DaSilva. Hint:
When shooting in low light — outside or in — always use a lightweight
mini tripod to hold the camera steady for the slower shutter speeds
required, DaSilva says.

-
“Try and look
below the surface” when photographing your travels, Frank explains. Look
for shots that capture something of the local ambience and culture.
-
Check calendars
ahead of time for festivals and other special events. Check out harbor
areas and amusement parks. Shoot farmers’ markets early in the morning
when locals are shopping.
Hint: Learn a
few words of the local language, and always ask people before taking
their pictures. Most happily agree.
Vacation Snaps
Tips 7: Share and share alike
-
Now that you’re an
expert and have taken tons of super vacation snaps, it’s time to share
your adventures. Using an online journal or blog, such as Windows Live
Spaces, allows you to easily share your photos with family and friends.
Source: Gerry Blackwell
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get the best buy & sell Camera, please call:
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