SiteHQ

SiteHQ

reliable & professional hosting packages to suit all budgets

Search Advanced SearchView Cart   

Practical Artistry: Light & Exposure for Digital Photographers: Light and Exposure for Digital Photographers (Practical Artistry)

Practical Artistry: Light & Exposure for Digital Photographers: Light and Exposure for Digital Photographers (Practical Artistry)

zoom enlarge 
Author: Harold Davis
Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Category: Book

List Price: £18.50
Buy New: £9.47
You Save: £9.03 (49%)



Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 229706

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 176
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 15.8 x 8.9 x 0.5

ISBN: 0596529880
Dewey Decimal Number: 778.7
EAN: 9780596529888
ASIN: 0596529880

Publication Date: April 4, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: New book. WE USE PRIORITY AIRMAIL ONLY for books from the USA. UK & European delivery is 7-10 days. Over 2,000,000 books sold to Amazon customers

Similar Items:

  • The Photographer's Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos
  • Adobe Photoshop CS3 for Photographers: A Professional Image Editor's Guide to the Creative Use of Photoshop for the Macintosh and PC
  • Understanding Shutter Speed: Creative Action and Low-light Photography Beyond 1/125 Second: Action, Low-Light and Creative Photography
  • Digital SLR Cameras and Photography for Dummies (For Dummies)
  • Understanding Exposure: How to Shoot Great Photographs with a Film or Digital Camera

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Far more pragmatic than you might think!   August 10, 2008
At first glance a book on light and exposure may seem a little bit technical and theoretical, however it's actually a very pragmatic guide to creative photography. When you think about it controlling the light coming into CCD is only marginally less fundamental than what you aim your lens at! The book gives a very thorough overview of what constitutes an exposure and the interplay between aperture, shutter speed and ISO. Following on from this introduction sections are devoted to each of these elements and why you may want to alter each one, e.g. altering aperture to give a greater depth of field or altering the shutter speed to freeze action. Each of these sections are well illustrated with examples of where and when you may want to control aperture, shutter speed and ISO and the effect they have on your shot.

My bugbear with digital photography books raises it's head once more with the final chapter on using photoshop. Light and Exposure makes a better stab at summarising some of the useful things you can do with an image editing suite, however it still really requires a complete book of it's own to cover in any sort of usable detail.



3 out of 5 stars Good on the art of exposure in nature pictures, but not comprehensive   July 17, 2008
This book is well illustrated with the author's own pictures, each being clearly relevant to the topic in the main text. It's easy to find a heading such as "Intentional Over and Underexposure", find a picture you like, and read about how the author took that picture, and why he made those choices. It covers the ground of shutter speed, aperture and ISO sensitivity comprehensively, highlighting the artistic benefits of each choice. It's less comprehensive on lighting, and uses quite a narrow range of images as examples.

Photography has been around for a long time, and readers might ask whether "digital" photography has changed enough to need new books. This volume covers familiar ground about apertures and shutter speeds, which is largely comparable to traditional film photography, but there are some changes, and this book does bring them out clearly. You can choose the ISO sensitivity for each image (balancing performance with noise interference), that you can see the image on the camera's LCD and learn from that to take another straight away, and that you can edit or even combine the images later in software, gaining flexibility from RAW format data.

The book studiously avoids hardware-specific issues, but does address questions like the position of your flash (front lighting is not subtle), the available range of apertures (many compact cameras have a narrow range, around f/8) and the physical size of the image sensor (smaller sensors are more vulnerable to noise, but have a greater depth of field). Where he does mention hardware, it's usually digital SLRs camera from Nikon or Canon.

This is very much about exposure. The aperture lets you control depth of field, to tell a story, direct attention, or just to have good bokeh. The shutter speed lets you avoid camera shake, freeze the subject's movement or accentuate it. The ISO sensitivity lets you improve colour quality, create artistic effects with noise, or just balance the exposure. The light meter built in to your camera will often not expose the image you really want, so spot metering and intentional exposure adjustments are well covered. Reasons for making each of the choices are discussed, particularly in terms of the artistic or story-telling effect.

Lighting is covered more briefly, with pages about flash, direction of lighting, sunlight at different times of day, white balance, and using a minimal studio. However, each of those topics is breezed over, by comparison to the exposure. At least one factor of the shutter speed goes completely un-mentioned; that at high speeds, the shutter is really a slit in a curtain moving gradually across the sensor, which could result in the same part of a fast moving subject smearing across the whole frame.

There is a section on the "digital darkroom", which wisely steers clear of being a tutorial on Adobe Photoshop. The author recommends capturing RAW files, but doesn't fully explain their strengths (they are higher resolution than JPEGs, typically being 12 bits per colour channel instead of 8, and contain exactly what was captured by the sensor and so can be reprocessed later without making things any worse than the processing done in the camera). The mathematical side seems to daunt him, in the apparent backwardness of white balance adjustments, and earlier, the relationship between aperture F-stops and the total amount of light, which is explained somewhat shakily.

The example images are clear and closely involved with the text. However, they do focus on the author's preferred topics; landscapes of mountains or bridges, flowers, and macro shots of water droplets. Almost every point in the text is illustrated, and the descriptions are really good at bringing out how the choices were made. However, there are many other styles of picture, and particularly many other issues with lighting, that are not covered.

The narrative flows well, partly because of the personal and friendly style. The print quality of the book is good, which is important, although the white space is all around the pictures and not around the body text, and unfortunately several key features of large pictures are hidden by the book spine. While the early topics of the book are covered in great detail, the later ones, (mainly about lighting) are skimmed more briefly.

In summary, the book is good on the artistic consequences of exposure in pictures of nature. It's fun to read, and really helps in making those choices an intermediate photographer might not have understood. But it's not truly comprehensive, either in its examples or in addressing its own title.


Site powered by Amazon.co.uk
Categories
Books
Computers
Software