
The most important thing about photography is you, how you think creatively, pre visualise how you want an image to look. This will tell you where to stand and angle to shoot for a great composition; when you'll get the best light and the settings you'll need to capture it.
Need to learn more about camera, settings, lenses, light and composition? Copy and paste the following into Udemy search: Mike Browne A Masterclass In Photography
Where Creativity Meets The Camera
Think differently about photography. The great master photographers of the past took amazing, inspiring images on the most basic of cameras, so maybe it’s not the camera that takes great photos. Maybe it’s the Photographer. That’s you by the way…
A blend of technical and creative control for any image
These five controls are super important and when combined in the correct way, it’s easy to shoot beautiful photographs of anything. If you haven’t got them figured yet, complete my Masterclass In Photography course here in Udemy, then come back to this one.
Choose which setting is most important for creative reasons
These settings have both technical uses, and creative uses. By combining them in different ways you can achieve exactly the photo you want. But first you have to think your way through what you want, choose which is the ‘primary’ setting or settings for the shot you want.
Changing a setting has a knock on effect
The ‘right’ camera settings and controls change all the time depending on what you want your photo to look like. Blurry background or sharp? Bright or dark? When you adjust one setting it’s like knocking over the first domino because it will have an effect on the others which you have to compensate for.
creative thinking > creative actions > creative camera
This is the behind the scenes story of one of the most challenging professional shoots I’ve done. Previsualising, planning, how everything went wrong but in the end we more than nailed it. We make our own luck.
Because pictures give you settings
Cameras can’t think right. So develop your imagination so you can pre visualise how you want your photo to look, how to get the best from light and location which you then translate into the settings needed to capture the image perfectly, just the way you want it.
Photographer actions not camera functions
Be aware of the weather, surroundings, people, which direction the wind’s blowing. Be prepared to wait for light to change and ask yourself powerful questions about where to stand, when to click, which settings you’ll need. Consider how windy it is because you may need a faster shutter speed to prevent camera shake blur because the wind is buffeting you. There’s more to photo alchemy than just the camera and settings.
Where do I need to be?
I was in a motorway petrol station when I saw this rainbow. Cars, signposts and six lanes of traffic between it and me. So what do you do in a situation like that?
We don’t ‘take’ photos. We make them. This short course is about vital photographer skills and functions which live outside the camera. How to pre-visualise how you want your photo to look, then figure out what You need to do to make it happen.
Is the light perfect now, or do you need to wait for a break in the clouds, or move to the shade, or shoot by a window? Where do you need to stand for the best angle? Which lens to choose for the look you want. These are things You have to think about and take action with to capture vibrant, exciting, interesting images.
Knowing what you want to achieve makes choosing settings easy. For example, when you know you want to blur movement to add life to the flow of a river it indicates what kind of shutter speed to use. If you want to capture an up close and personal feeling, you’ll know what kind of lens to use.
Whether you shoot on an expensive camera or a phone, You and how you think is the no1 most important thing in all photography. It’s You who turns lead into gold
You'll learn my top five camera controls and how they can be combined creatively and technically for any image, 3 essential tools which will make your photography not only easier but make it look awesome too.
And you can come behind the scenes on what was one of my most challenging yet personally rewarding professional photoshoots so you can see how it was planned, what went wrong and how I figured out what to do about it. It was a lot of work - but just 3 minutes of that was shooting.