Posts Tagged ‘ Photo tips ’
16 Digital Photography Tips for Christmas
In an effort to bring you the best tips from the web, we came across this great post from Darren Rowse on taking fantastic photos during the Holidays. Although the title suggests these tips are specifically for Christmas, we’re sure they can be used for Chanukah, Kwanzaa and maybe even Festivus celebrations as well. Not sure we’d recommend them for Three Kings Day (darn Three Kings……we’ll catch you on camera one day….LOL)
Anyhow this article is sure to help you get THE BEST set of photos for a Holiday to remember. Just click the picture or the link and make sure you pack your camera this Holiday!
How to Take A Good Picture On Your Camera Phone
Hey everyone here’s another helpful article from WikiHow
NOTE: Links don’t work.
Photo from: NY Times
The modern camera phone has been called “a credible candidate for the title of Most Convenient Tool for image capture.” Whether it be a random, spur-of-the-moment snapshot or well-thought-out compositions, a camera phone is a valuable tool for photography. Often, the most inspiring pictures occur in everyday life when you do not have a standard camera with you. The phone that you are carrying in your pocket can capture those impromptu photo moments when it’s impractical or impossible to have your SLR or other camera with you at all times. And, if you know their limitations, it is possible to take great, memorable pictures on your camera phone.
Steps
- Avoid subjects in low light, at least if you want them to be consistently lit. The small sensors in camera phones cannot run at high ISO speeds (i.e. high sensitivity to light, permitting indoor photos without a flash) without introducing large amounts of noise. In most circumstances, this precludes indoor photos other than in the best-lit places.
- Avoid bright reflections, and other “hot-spots”. This will either force the camera to under-expose the rest of the shot, or cause the camera to blow out the highlights on the brightest parts of the shot. The latter is worse, since it is sometimes possible to extract details from parts of the image that are too dark, but impossible to recover blown highlights (since there is no detail therein to extract). On the other hand, this can be used to artistic ends, such as with bright light streaming through a window.
- Avoid anything that requires tight focusing. Due to their very short focal lengths (the distance between a camera’s optical elements and the sensor, again, owing to their small sensors), camera phones excel at shots where nearly all of a scene is in focus. However, this (and their typically weak auto-focus mechanisms) usually precludes focusing on objects very close to the phone, or having a very shallow depth of field to get a blurred background effect (which can, with varying degrees of authenticity, be faked in software later anyway).
- Avoid “mirror shots”, as well as arm-length shots taken by yourself. Aside from them being clichèd, they require taking photos indoors (see above), and mirrors also often end up confusing auto-focus mechanisms. Get outside and get someone to take the photo for you. If you’d rather take the picture yourself, most camera phones have an auto-timer feature so you can set the phone somewhere and get into frame.
- The steadier you keep the phone as you are taking the picture, the sharper the image will be.
- Make sure your phone has enough free memory to keep taking pictures. If your phone is full, download some of the pictures from the phone to save room. Most mobile phones nowadays support MicroSD or other memory cards that allow the phone’s capacity to be raised. Even something as small as a 1GB MicroSD card can hold hundreds more pictures.
- Note that some places (e.g., bathrooms) are inappropriate for photos.
- A phone with an integrated camera with free memory space.
- A photographic subject
Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Take A Good Picture On Your Camera Phone. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.


