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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Canon 40d Made Easy Training Dvds 1 & 2

Learn every feature and function step by step in an easy explained manner. This camera does so many things you may not be aware of that we reveal in this video so take your photography to the next level withou through a complicated manual.
Customer Review: Great Video and Support
This is a great video because they speak in everyday language and cover every aspect of the camera. I like they way they show the menus and camera LCD full screen on the DVD. In addition, they give great "in the field tips" on how to exposure/focus lock. You learn about the camera and then 5-6 tips that you can put to use right away. An added bonus is that they give you 1 year of support. I was a little skeptical on this claim, but after taking some additional classes, I sent a detailed technical question and the response was thorough and insightful. Even after reading several books on the 40D, it seems like video can add a dimension that books can't. I think in 1 or 2 scenes they could have done some re-takes due to the video lens being a little distorted, but overall it adds to the personal feel of the video. I would highly recommend this video for anyone.


Know anyone who has been ripped off and lost some money? It's actually difficult to steal a credit card number traveling electronically across the Net. Otherwise our banking system would fail. It's easier to grab a receipt out of a trashcan at a restaurant or hotel lobby. While hackers have broken into databases - the incidents are exciting to hear about, but rare.

Presently, e-commerce merchants are trying out a new protection technique. On phone orders and some mail orders, the merchant is asking for the CID number of the card (on the back of MasterCard, Visa, and Discover cards, and the front of American Express). And remember, you're not liable for more than $50 in fraudulent credit card usage, and credit card companies are known to forgive even the $50.

So where's the problem? Credit card fraud is actually an issue for the Big 4 credit card companies. But the credit card companies and banks are not about to admit it. Why? The question of consumer confidence. Financial institutions downplay the problem. Customers will lose faith in the Net if they feel it is not secure.

Does all this apply to stolen photos? In the stock photo industry there's 'big brother' protection by the large corporate stock agencies (the Big 3), who each have an oak table and swivel chairs filled with attorneys searching out cases of misuse of their photos. If they find a case, it's to everyone's benefit when they publicly expose the culprits, which can deter potential future infringement attempts. We all benefit by that.

Rohn Engh is director of PhotoSource International and publisher of PhotoStockNotes. Pine Lake Farm, 1910 35th Road, Osceola, WI 54020 USA. Telephone: 1 800 624 0266 Fax: 1 715 248 7394. Web site: http://www.photosource.com/products

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Monday, February 23, 2009

Camcorder Digital Camera Bag Black & Gray

Camera Bag: Ideal for your camcorder, digital or 35 mm camera and all of your photo accessories! This Ambico BC53GA Camcorder/Digital Camera Bag is designed to fit most small camcorders and compact digital video recorders! Its padded interior.


Composition in photography can be a difficult subject to teach to others. This is because composition can be a deeply personal thing. What appeals to me may not appeal to you.

However, many photographers, beginners in particular, are not happy with the way their photos look. But often they can't quite put their finger on why.

There are plenty of rules and guidelines to help you with composition. Possibly the best known is the Rule Of Thirds. This rule suggests your composition should be divided into a nine-part grid, by running two lines horizontally (a third from the top and a third from the bottom) and two lines vertically (a third from the left and a third from the right). According to the rule, large objects (trees, buildings etc) should be placed on these lines, and small objects are most effective if positioned where the lines intersect.

Photos composed around these guidelines have a balanced look. Objects seem to appear exactly where your eye expects to find them. So when you build a composition around the Rule Of Thirds, your photo satisfies the viewer's natural sense of proportion.

Some people have an innate sense of visual balance. They have a natural flair for creative composition that does not need to be guided by rules. However, if you were to examine their photos, you would be sure to find that most of their photos fitted the rule perfectly - even if they were not aware of it.

If you are a beginner in photography and still struggling with composition, the Rule Of Thirds is an excellent place to start. I recommend to every beginner to learn it, practice it, get so familiar with it that you start to apply it without even thinking. Then, once you are truly comfortable with the Rule Of Thirds - ignore it about half the time.

Recently a man walked into my gallery, and before I even said hello I heard him telling his friends: "You see, this is a good photo because it fits the rule of thirds. This is a bad photo because the kangaroo is right in the middle. This sunset is no good because the horizon is too low when it should be here, a third of the way up..."

This man was obviously an ardent devotee of the Rule Of Thirds. For him, anything that stepped outside the boundaries of the rule was automatically a bad photo. But is composition really so simplistic? Of course not.

The real world is not nearly so neatly organised as the Rule Of Thirds. More importantly, being creative means finding your own way to express the character of a subject, which may not always require a traditional approach.

I can give you two very simple examples from my own collection. One of my outback photos has a very detailed foreground, and some tall bushes in the background. I have positioned the horizon right through the centre of the photo. If I raised it higher, I would have lost the foreground. If I dropped it lower, the tops of the bushes would be cut off. In this case, the composition was influenced by the circumstances.

The other example is a sunset photo. The sky in this photo is truly spectacular. I dropped the horizon very low so the colours of the sky fill the frame. Had I set the horizon in the 'correct' place, according to the Rule Of Thirds, one third of the picture would be totally black. Not only would this be wasted space that did nothing for the photo, it would also diminish the impact of the sky.

Choosing to ignore the Rule Of Thirds is not the same thing as not being aware of it. In each case when taking a photo I would consider the Rule Of Thirds, and judge whether its application will make my picture better, or worse. If I choose to ignore it, it is a deliberate method of adding impact to the composition, possibly by drawing attention to a particular feature like the sky in my sunset photo.

So, back to my earlier statement. If you are struggling with composition, the Rule Of Thirds may be the best thing you ever learn. Not because you should use it for every photo (you shouldn't) but because you should have the judgment to know when to use it and when to ignore it. That way, when you choose to compose your photo differently, it is not just a clumsy mistake, but a creative choice to improve the impact of the photo. Once you cross that threshold, your photography will become a true expression of your artistic eye.

Composition, aperture, shutter speed, depth of field...all the essentials of good photography seem simple when they are explained in terms you can understand. Visit http://www.naturesimage.com.au and check out Andrew Goodall's ebook "Photography in Plain English" to discover your own talent for photography. While you are there, subscribe to the online newsletter for even more tips... it's free!

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