Monday, November 16th, 2009

Digital Photography Tips – Travel Photography

Today I want to look at a few images from a trip to Paris. Let us study some digital photography tips about travel photography.

When you go to a different place, your senses are heightened and you are aware of the smallest details. Details you might normally overlook.

One of my list of things to do in my life, was to visit the Louvre Museum in Paris, France. Thanks to my good friend, Travel Editor at the Orange County Register, Gary Warner, my first trip was a quick 18 hour side trip to the city of lights before meeting up for our assignment in London, England. What a great guy!

One of my strongest rules about vacation photography is too shoot now!

Things happen and you might never see or have a chance to photograph something again. So see it and shoot it!

Just because you are visiting the Eiffel Tower, you still need to apply strong photo rules to make a great image.

Please remember the three rules of a great photograph:
1) Composition
2) Lighting
3) The Moment

Remember these and when you are in the fantastic and exotic location, you can make incredible and memorable images to last a lifetime.

Our first image was a very French-looking man who stopped to gaze out one of the windows in the Louvre. Let’s reverse engineer to see how I did:

1. Composition – I placed the gentleman and his beret in the lower right area of convergence, where the lower horizontal and the right vertical meet and the tower of the building in the upper left area of convergence.

2. Lighting – Strong light from outside created a silhouette of anything inside the window. A strong and high contrast image results from this type of lighting.

3. The Moment – The moment captures the essence of the scene or event that you are photographing. For me, the solemness of this museum made me want to capture a reverence that I felt. In the midst of the masterpieces, this man took a break to gather his thoughts before returning to the most incredible museum in the world.

Next, one of my favorite pieces in the Louve.

Cupid and Psyche by Canova.

The story/myth about Cupid and Psyche in a nutshell is about love, jealousy, redemption and loyalty.

Let’s do one more:
1) Composition – The lovers are placed into the lower left area of convergence and the shaft of light helps to lead the eyes of the viewer to the statue. Also, the wings of Cupid and Psyche’s arms make an X on their faces.

2) Lighting – Beautiful sidelight coming from a large window on camera right and the shaft of light add drama and contrast.

3) The Moment – Even though our couple is frozen in their pose, what a romantic pose it is. The summary of their story is shown by Canova and his masterpiece.

When I went to Paris hoping to capture a different view of the Eiffel Tower. My first idea was to shoot the tower from a window. Too expensive for a hotel and I couldn’t find the right angle, maybe next time! My next wish was to try a view from the surrounding neighborhood.

I wandered around and found a street scene complete with cars, trees and an apartment building. I placed the tower in the left vertical third, to add to the imposing height of the tower.

Finally, a nice surprise!

I was on a tour boat on the Seine river and saw the Statue of Liberty! This second Statue of Liberty is near the Grenelle Bridge on the Île des Cygnes, an island in the river Seine.

I composed it so the statue was in the right vertical and the Eiffel Tower could be seen in the left vertical. Lady Liberty’s face is near the upper right area of convergence and the tower is in the lower left area of convergence.

Thank You, France!

Lastly, I just wanted to thank Phototrend.fr for linking my new blog!

Bonjour!


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9 Responses

November 17, 2009
Brock Sheets

Wow, Mike! This is the first of your posts I’ve read, and I’m amazed. I’m going to read as many as I can, because I would love to get better at photography, but I’ve got NO SKILL right now!!

Thanks for the great resource!!


November 17, 2009
Nathan Brecht

I really like the man in the window.

I’m impressed by the idea that you were able to know the feeling that you wanted the photo to express before you even took it (the reverence that you felt) and how well you were able to articulate that through the captured moment. A very artistic yet systematic process…

And cool website!


November 17, 2009
Rachael Farris

I want to take pictures like this! haha I wish I had an awesome camera…. :)


November 17, 2009

You’re awesome — as usual your photos are beautiful!


November 17, 2009
Whitney Schroeder

hi there!
i’ve been looking at your photos on facebook and was so excited to see that you have a blog! all of your pictures are fantastic – great work!!


November 17, 2009
Shannon Buonsanti

Hi Mike!
Long time no speak. I love all your pictures. You are my go to guy!
I have a question – I have a Nikon D60. It’s a great camera, but sometimes when I’m trying to “capture” the moment, the shutter seems slow. Could my new memory card be causing this?
What can make shutter speed faster/slower?
Thanks!
Hope you’re well.
Shannon


November 17, 2009
Michael Kitada

@shannon great to hear from you. A couple of questions about your camera. Is the shutter always slow when you depress the button? Does it occur everywhere or just indoors? I don’t think it’s the memory card, unless it is has a very slow writing speed. Most of the new cards can upload pretty fast. My thought is if it doesn’t happen all the time, you might check your ISO, it could be set to low indoors and the camera is asking for too much light and creating a slow shutter speed and frustrations for you. Let me know and we’ll figure this out. Thanks for visiting and keep coming back! Mike


April 10, 2010

Nice site design , what is the name of tamplate you used in your site


April 13, 2010
Michael Kitada

Hi, Thanks. My blog was designed by a friend who customized it for me. Not sure what he started out with.
Sorry, I couldn’t be more of a help. Come back anytime.
Michael


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