Llarian
Well-known member
I’ve been talking for a while about doing a photography workshop on RF, so after being hounded by Mike and Nikki, here’s the start!
To begin with, let me run down my plan, or lack of one, for this workshop.
I plan to start out with a few articles on the basics of exposure and light, which are really the core aspects of photography. (Aside from composition, which we’ll get to later.)
These first few articles apply to all photography, not just reef tanks, but I do plan to get into some more reef-specific material a little later. Of particular interest here is white balance under reef lighting and how to deal with it.
I suppose I’ll open by saying that photography is really nothing more than light, and how you allow it through the lens and onto your film or sensor. That’s really all there is to it.
Sounds simple, right? =) I’ll try to present things in such a way that they’re understandable, but knowing me, that’ll probably come later when people start asking questions.
Since I’ll be using a lot of terms that you may or may not know, but that are important to explaining photography and more important, expressing what you’re doing with it to other photographers, please ask questions if I don’t adequately explain a term. I’ll do my best to explain them as I use them.
Just as a side note, I’ll be saying film throughout the article, but for most of us (myself included) it’s probably really a digital sensor of some sort.
To begin with, let me run down my plan, or lack of one, for this workshop.
I plan to start out with a few articles on the basics of exposure and light, which are really the core aspects of photography. (Aside from composition, which we’ll get to later.)
These first few articles apply to all photography, not just reef tanks, but I do plan to get into some more reef-specific material a little later. Of particular interest here is white balance under reef lighting and how to deal with it.
I suppose I’ll open by saying that photography is really nothing more than light, and how you allow it through the lens and onto your film or sensor. That’s really all there is to it.
Sounds simple, right? =) I’ll try to present things in such a way that they’re understandable, but knowing me, that’ll probably come later when people start asking questions.
Since I’ll be using a lot of terms that you may or may not know, but that are important to explaining photography and more important, expressing what you’re doing with it to other photographers, please ask questions if I don’t adequately explain a term. I’ll do my best to explain them as I use them.
Just as a side note, I’ll be saying film throughout the article, but for most of us (myself included) it’s probably really a digital sensor of some sort.