Introduction to Digital Photography
This class is for beginners through
intermediate photographers. Any digital camera is fine for
this class.
July 9, 2008 - 9 Weeks -
5:30pm-6:30pm - $120
Lesson 1: Getting to Know Your Digital Camera
Understanding your camera controls and functions. The five most
valuable features. Features to avoid. Checklist of what your
camera can and cannot do. How to get the most out of your digital
camera. The biggest advantage of shooting digital: the right way
to use your LCD monitor.
Assignment: Use
Dpreview to compare your
camera to 2 others in its class.
Lesson 2: File Formats and Quality Settings
JPEG and other in-camera options such as Raw and TIFF: pros and cons
of each shooting format. Tips on shooting with RAW capture and image
conversion. Storage and memory issues - doing digital photography on
the road. Why you should convert your JPEG pics to TIFF format in
the computer.
Assignment: JPEG A JPEG That Has Been JPEG’ed
Lesson 3: Introduction to Image Enhancing Software
Adjusting brightness, contrast, color balance, color saturation and
sharpness in a few steps. Introduction to image correction with RAW
converter software. And a bonus: a brief introduction to software
for making long panoramic images from several photos made for
exactly this purpose.
Assignment: Correct a Technically Poor Image in
Under 60 seconds
Lesson 4: Controlling White Balance and
Other Aspects, In-Camera
The color of light for the non-physics major. Understanding
the white balance options. The easy way to getting the correct white
balance. Adjusting the in-camera level for sharpening and color
saturation.
Assignment: White Balance Before and After; also,
Saturation/Sharpness Before and After
Lesson 5: Composition, Tripods and Lens Choice
Principles of visual design. Putting the Rule of Thirds to
good use. An easy way to understand the Golden Rectangle. Shooting
vertical as well as horizontal photos. Understanding lens focal
lengths. Wide angle and telephoto options with digital SLR “focal
length magnification factors”.
Assignment: Rule of Thirds/Orientation: Before and
After
Lesson 6: Digital Exposure 101
The primary exposure concepts. Why cameras sometimes make images
that are too dark. Using Exposure Compensation, a simple method for
perfect exposures. Learn where to meter from and use Exposure Lock.
The part ISO plays in exposure. Tip: Use a Semi Automatic mode while
maintaining full control.
Assignment: Exposure: Over, Under and Just Right /
Create and HDR image
Lesson 7: Creative Control of Apertures (f/stops) and
Shutter Speeds
Learn “depth of field” and motion control with aperture and shutter
speed selection, using the camera’s automatic and semi-automatic
modes. A primer on depth of field. Prevent blurring from camera
shake and subject movement. Great news about exposure when changing
f/stops or shutter speeds in certain camera modes.
Assignment: Aperture/Depth of Field Control; also,
Shutter Speed/Motion Control
Lesson 8: Exposure Evaluation and Low-Light Photography
Using the camera’s histogram (and “loss of highlight detail
warning”) to evaluate exposure and contrast. The challenges and
compromises of night photography. ISO Equivalents - changing ISO on
the fly. Minimizing digital noise (graininess). Shooting at night -
with and without a tripod. Making beautiful images in low light.
Assignment: Night Shoot - Before and After; also,
High Contrast vs. Low Contrast
Review: Voting on Best Work
Class size
is limited to 6 students.
Pay Online or Call
401-567-9071 to register.