Tutorials
How to record audio for interviews without getting too complicated
It’s not too much of a leap for photographers to move into video. After all, most of the same rules of composition apply, and most…
Make 2024 your best year as a photographer with these tips
It’s a brand new year, and all of us are thinking carefully about what this means for us personally and professionally. If you’re like me,…
Watch this beautiful timelapse about how snowflakes form
If you’ve been lucky enough to have a white Christmas this year, then you might want to take advantage of the snow and photograph some…
A Beauty Portrait with Gravity-Defying Hair
The goal of a beauty portrait is to highlight the subject’s physical beauty. The challenge in adding the word ‘creative’ to the mix is that you…
How to fix slow phone footage on Premiere Pro
If you’re experiencing trouble and slowness when trying to edit phone footage in Premiere Pro, you’re not the only one. Phone footage can give you…
So, you want to photograph a volcano? Here’s all you need to know
Have you ever wondered what it’s like to photograph the raw power of Mother Nature? To feel the ground shake beneath your feet as you quite literally watch molten lava spewing into the sky? Throughout my travels, I’ve been privileged to witness incredible sights from all corners of our marvelous planet. However, I am bluntly honest when I say that nothing I had ever seen had even remotely compared to how epic it was to observe a volcano in action.
Back Button Focus – What it is and why you might want to use it
Yes, we’re bringing up the back button focus. This is one of those things that regularly seems to split the camera-owning public. One side swears by it, and the other side can’t stand it or just doesn’t see the point. But, like many things in photography, it’s just another way of doing something. In this case, focusing your lens.
How not to make easy money as a photographer
Ah, those classic ‘how I earned ten grand a month as a photographer by doing this’ tutorials that seem to be everywhere. That’s why I’m…
Shooting 3D VR photos with the Canon 5.2mm dual fish eye lens
To make any flat image look 3D, you need to have two images of the same subject taken from slightly different points of view, just like in VR-180 videos. lets see how.