Photography for Beginners Part 16: Learn From Your Photos

Each post in this series builds on information discussed in previous posts. See the Photography for Beginners page on the menu for links to all the posts.

Part 15:  Types of Night Photography

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You should read articles and watch videos from a variety of sources to learn photography concepts and to get practical tips for improving your images. But the two things that will teach you the most about photography are: using your camera often and in a variety of situations, and carefully studying photos.

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Some Night Photos

Photography for Beginners Part 14:  Night Photography
Photography for Beginners Part 15:  Types of Night Photography

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I didn’t include any images in my Night Photography posts because they were already overly long. So I’m displaying a few here.

All photos were taken with my current camera, a Fujifilm X-T20 with an APS-C crop sensor. All focal lengths are given in full frame equivalents.

All of the photos are SOOC (straight out of camera) JPEGS. SOOC means you haven’t done any editing. Though I did reduce resolution so the files wouldn’t take up too much of my limited WP storage allowance. (Click on the images to see clearly with no WP compression.)

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Photography for Beginners Part 15: Types of Night Photography

Each post in this series builds on information discussed in previous posts. See the Photography for Beginners page on the menu for links to all the posts.

Part 14: Night Photography

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I had put many hours into writing and editing the second part of Night Photography and it was ready to post last November. Then my tablet died. I not only lost the completed post itself, but all my outline notes I’d been working from. I was demoralized back then, and it took me this long to finally attempt to recreate the post. Now, many more hours later, here it is.

This is a continuation of Part 14. In that post I covered a variety of tips for shooting at night. In this post we’ll discuss some specific types of night photography.

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MIA and a Photography Video Rec

I’ve been missing in action lately because I’ve been having a rotten month. First my tablet died, which was totally demoralizing because it not only contained my app that keeps all my photos organized, but also took with it several blog posts that I’d been working on. Hours of work down the drain that I have to recreate.

Then I got an infection, so spent a week in pain and feeling generally crummy.

Then a friend died unexpectedly, which has hit me hard.

So yeah. Haven’t been feeling up to the work needed to get back on track with blogging yet. Just getting my replacement tablet partially set up took a couple weeks, and I still don’t like it nearly as much as my previous tablet. I’m dreading having to go through all my photos on my laptop and reorganizing again! (They’re just stored by date not subject, and retain a lot of pics that need deleting.)

My plan is to try to dig into things again after the holidays. So I’m not gone, just hopelessly delayed for a bit.

I did just watch an interesting video on YouTube that’s worth mentioning. It’s about using intuition to improve your photography. So much about photography is technical, even guidelines about composition. This video talks about how to simplify things and follow your instincts in order to capture more creative images. For those who read my Photography for Beginners series, you know I like to stress that the most important thing is to please yourself, and the video directly addresses that. You can watch it here.