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General Photography
F/stops and Colors
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<blockquote data-quote="ohkphoto" data-source="post: 27757" data-attributes="member: 1573"><p>Fascinating subject and interesting exercise, Anthony.</p><p>It inspired me to pull a book off my shelf that I hadn't finished reading but remember that this author talked a lot about color and light (not as detailed as explanation above)</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Galen-Rowells-Inner-Outdoor-Photography/dp/039304985X" target="_blank">"Inner Game of Outdoor Photography" </a>by Galen Rowell. I highly recommend it. When you look at his photos, you can see he obviously understood the connections between color, light, what the camera sees, what the photographer sees, and what the viewer sees. Plus, he shares so much wisdom about the art of photography . . . he died before he made it to the digital age, but this book is still very relevant. The tools may have changed, but not the art of good photography.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ohkphoto, post: 27757, member: 1573"] Fascinating subject and interesting exercise, Anthony. It inspired me to pull a book off my shelf that I hadn't finished reading but remember that this author talked a lot about color and light (not as detailed as explanation above) [URL="http://www.amazon.com/Galen-Rowells-Inner-Outdoor-Photography/dp/039304985X"]"Inner Game of Outdoor Photography" [/URL]by Galen Rowell. I highly recommend it. When you look at his photos, you can see he obviously understood the connections between color, light, what the camera sees, what the photographer sees, and what the viewer sees. Plus, he shares so much wisdom about the art of photography . . . he died before he made it to the digital age, but this book is still very relevant. The tools may have changed, but not the art of good photography. [/QUOTE]
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