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mortalitas
13-02-2013, 6:45pm
Good afternoon all,

The title pretty much covers it.

I think the best advice I have been given was when viewing a picture that you like, don't just enjoy it, figure out why you like it, that way, when looking for your own photo spots, you can apply what you have seen previously.

what is some of the best advice that you have been given?

I @ M
13-02-2013, 6:48pm
Has to be " get off the 'net and go and take photos " and adding my own bit, "forget the sharpness, concentrate on composition, colour and contrast, then print it" :D

ricktas
13-02-2013, 6:59pm
Don't try and learn everything at once. Learn one thing at a time, and just work at improving little by little. From my grandfather in the 1970's and still very relevant today.

Kym
13-02-2013, 7:22pm
Andrew is spot on.
The first element of the NTP Learning plan is to put the camera in auto and work on taking photos, with emphasis on composition.

Darey
13-02-2013, 7:28pm
Determine what is driving you to take an image and then shoot to best convey to your audience what that driving force was.

(ie:- was it colour, texture, movement or a feeling etc.)

My own thoughts on image taking.

Cattleprod
13-02-2013, 9:52pm
Always have your camera with you....

Cocoajam
13-02-2013, 9:55pm
Don't shoot a photo for anyone else, shoot it for you number 1, that way it will reflect you, your style, and the balance is usually there. Shoot it for someone else and you get too hung up on the 'hows' and 'whys'......

rookie
13-02-2013, 9:56pm
always carry a spare battery

JM Tran
13-02-2013, 10:38pm
Create. Dont just capture.

ameerat42
14-02-2013, 9:43am
Give up while you're still behind.

AdamR
14-02-2013, 1:02pm
Mine is similar to Darey. If something makes you wanna take a photo, think about what that something is and try capture it, forget the distractions around it. I also think that shooting what you want, not others is sound advice.

arthurking83
14-02-2013, 2:59pm
No specific advice to me that I can remember(having the attention span of a dead ant!) .. but the best advice given regularly here(that I've noticed, as I don't frequent all that many photophorums):

post an image for CC, don't take it to heart or get hung up if the CC isn't as you'd like it to be(ie. all praise), and learn from the experience to do better next time.

andrewvid
14-02-2013, 3:12pm
My most helpful was probably "get off your fat lazy a*s and go take photos somewhere!"

I still yet to put that advice into action..

extraball
14-02-2013, 4:12pm
when someone bumped the UV filter thread :cool:

AVALANCHE
14-02-2013, 5:11pm
Think before you shoot.

and

treat your dslr like a film camera, and each shot is worth $2 to process. Is what you are about to shoot worth that?

stevo01
14-02-2013, 5:14pm
Lots of good advice being thrown around here, I especially like Rick's "don't try to learn everything at once, do it little by little".

A piece of advice that I have heard a few times is along the lines of "Slow down, be present, and think about what you're shooting and what you are trying to convey".

ricktas
14-02-2013, 7:01pm
I would like to add one more

"You will not be a professional photographer quickly. It takes years to gain the knowledge and skills to be able to produce professional quality photographic results. Just learn, enjoy taking photos and have fun. Being a Pro is not just owning expensive camera gear".

old dog
14-02-2013, 7:39pm
Rick just said it.....enjoy yourself.

fotog
14-02-2013, 8:02pm
Advice to myself...Don 't just look, you must see.

And, if you forget the memory card one more time...

extraball
14-02-2013, 8:58pm
And, if you forget the memory card one more time...

done that twice allready, I now transfer the pics via a usb cable. The SD card stays in!

jim
14-02-2013, 9:33pm
From Dewitt Jones in Outdoor Photographer Magazine some time in the mid '90s. Figure out what specifically is "turning you on" (his words) in a scene, then see if you can get rid of everything else. Crudely paraphrased from memory. Or, as I see it now, try to eliminate every element that's not helping your picture.

pjs2
14-02-2013, 10:53pm
Shoot your mother in law in good light.

stevo01
15-02-2013, 10:58am
Shoot your mother in law

Some might say that is good advice, although not really photography advice :lol: