Recycle Reuse & Repurpose

Glass Jar Photo Frames05-step-5

In South Africa, recycling is a way of life that not very many people incorporate into their daily routine. Partly because we do not have the facilities or many places that offer this service, but mainly because most people are too lazy to think about what happens to their rubbish once they toss it in the bin.

So instead of carelessly dumping your trash, one of the ways you can help give used things a second life, is to reuse your glass jars, and use them as novelty photo frames.

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today i give you special deal; two for the price of one.

lesson 3 & 4 were just as mesmerizing as the previous two. yes, i said mesmerizing. i would be lying if i told you i haven’t absolutely LOVED this course so far. maybe i’m a photography nerd? do you get those? if you do, i’m convinced that i am one. i would also be lying if i said that it’s been easy. there have definitely been those frustrating moments where what i see in my head and how the photograph actually turns out haven’t quite met up. but i have come to terms with the fact that it’s all part of the creative process.

clearly our classes have finally gotten to the point i’ve seriously been looking forward to; the place where we are allowed to use our creativity. lesson 3 covered learning to understand and master creative choices ie.; working with aperture to produce the envisioned DOF (depth of field), shutter speed to produce the effect of freezing the moment or showing movement. we were taught how a higher ISO setting can be helpful in lower light settings.

AND THEN, wait for it…the Grey Card! what a useful piece of grey cardboard. it’s so useful because it is 18% reflective, meaning it absorbs & reflects the perfect amount of light so as to give us a perfect average of the light falling on our subject. perfect exposure! that’s if you can effectively hold the grey card tilted to the right angle in one hand and hold your camera balancing your light meter with the other. did i mention this glorious course is strengthening my hand eye coordination too? anyway, the point is, the bride’s dress will be white instead of blue and the groom’s tux will be black instead of grey. a wonderful, cost effective substitute for an electronic hand-held light meter.

on to lesson 4 where we learned about flash photography. i learned that the little pop-up flash on my Canon can be quite effective at filling in light where awkward shadows would usually sit. here i was, thinking that flash on my camera was the devil when actually it’s a wonderful little added extra to everything else my nifty camera can do. of course, again, it’s not as simple as popping the flash up and snapping away. we were informed of “GN” (Guide Number – the power output of the flash), “fall off” and “flash synchronisation speed” and my favourite, TTL (Through The Lens flash exposure metering). what i can say is that i’m a fan of this “TTL”. basically, because this feature is built into my digital camera i don’t have to do a bunch of on-the-spot maths calculations to figure out the flash intensity needed. film is GREAT, i’m sure. but I don’t like maths.

i also learned i really want a “bounce flash”.

when it came to composition we were given some “rules” or “essential tips” (if you don’t like rules). there’s the “rule of thirds” and “power points”. creating effective photographs often means simplifying and usually choosing one COI (Center Of Interest). as a photographer you have to preconceive the image you want and then you have to guide the viewers eye to your “point” with your use of colour, contrast, leading lines and camera angles. simplifying your image does not equal simplifying your thought processes before you make the photograph.

and that’s why we don’t simply take photographs. we MAKE them.

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i realise a little more with every class that every penny i earn from now on will likely be spent on some or other piece of camera equipment. every lens we were introduced to at our last class sounded essential. i’m pretty sure i need at LEAST; a portrait lens, a telephoto lens, a macro lens, 2 ultra wide angle lenses and a fish eye lens as a cherry on the top (and that’s just to start). i haven’t told my husband what lenses cost, i just said “expensive”. for now i’ll have to be content with my little 18mm – 55mm “kit lens”.

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a friend recently asked me to describe myself in a few words. i said “commitment-phobe-but-recently-married, adventurer. i am constantly looking for ways to quench my thirst for change and new experiences. my latest exploration comes in the form of photography. i’m a noob at it. if you don’t think photography really classifies as “hard-core”, wait till you hear the jargon.

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In this issue:

Our featured reader’s portfolio is by Gavin Falck

5 Ways to fall in love with photography again

See the latest products releases and industry news in Scoop.

We learn about the White Balance.

Click here to read this issue.

Please leave your thoughts and comments below or send them to magazine@photocomment.net.

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See original article here: http://bit.ly/8OPQ63

Joz Wang

When Joz Wang and her brother bought their mom a Nikon Coolpix S630 digital camera for Mother’s Day last year, they discovered what seemed to be a malfunction. Every time they took a portrait of each other smiling, a message flashed across the screen asking, “Did someone blink?” No one had. “I thought the camera was broken!” Wang, 33, recalls. But when her brother posed with his eyes open so wide that he looked “bug-eyed,” the messages stopped.

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PhotoComment Magazine October Issue

PhotoComment Magazine October Issue

It is here! The October Issue of PhotoComment is now live and available to read by clicking the ‘Read Magazine’ button on our website or type http://photocomment.mymag.co.za into your browser.

This month we feature Alet Pretorius in our Pro Portfolio and find out about her life as a photo journalist and what she does when she is not chasing the news.  Leon Laubscher our featured reader shows us his portfolio and tells us how he got started.

We review the awesome new Olympus E-P1 and the Sony Alpha A850. Will you buy one these?

The biggest news of all is the launch of our new competition. We are a running the competition in association with Sony and are pleased to announce that Sony is sponsoring an Alpha 230 as the prize.

See the magazine for more!

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The house went quiet. My Husband had left for work. There was no camera talk and no photographic debate.

I had specially laid in bed longer to hear his new idea as it babbled forth from the bathroom with tones of early morning excitement.

“A new camera,” and with that announcement his earplugs went in and he skipped over the step into the shower.

This was my three minute break to organise my thoughts, hopes and dreams for my day.

“I’m excited,” he was back with all the thrills of a wet dog.

This was our first year of marriage. His parents had warned me that photography is the language he speaks, his mother tongue. I tried to do a quick tally of the cameras in our home and ran out of fingers soon. Besides ten is already a ridiculous number of cameras to have for any practical reason.

My Husband sinks into guilt over the amount of cameras he collects compared with the number of photo’s he takes which he feels is never enough. I’ve assured him he is a camera collector as well as a photographer.

Art and design are my choice of life long study and practise. I therefore have and understanding of photography’s place in the visual world. There is a place in my husbands heart, however that I do not comprehend. There tucked in his chest is a fully functional new and used cameras shop haunted by all walks of the photographic plain. There are famous photographers, photojournalists and untidy unkept students who live on the scent of darkroom chemicals. The old master photographer looks with all seeing eyes who’s pupils seem to flick as they capture snapshots constantly. Cameras salesmen of knowledge, practise and calibre man the counters. There are Nikonians (die hard Nikon users). This is where I roll my eyes as it is all Starship Enterprise to me.

This Heart chamber is modeled after the place of his Saturday job. It’s his photographic think thank that supplies him with photo fuel for the week. Saturdays are his chance to get behind the counter and converse in his native tongue. Stray alphabet and numerals make up a lot of it, “f stop”, “30 D”, “40 D” and “k 10 D” are just some I heard this morning.

I have become a lot more accepting of this camera and all associated gadgets shop, since I realised that My Love carries it around with him always. To me a light warm flame starts in my heart as I watch him care and nurture his passion and when he bewails it as he can see my desperation for any other kind of conversation. He is a little boy in his own world where possibilities are endless and friends abundant. How can I not join in the fun?

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