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<blockquote data-quote="nickt" data-source="post: 405324" data-attributes="member: 4923"><p>You can certainly learn and practice indoors. If there is enough light to see, you can take pictures. Some shots might be high iso shots or flash shots, but its all good. You can practice learning the relationship of shutter, aperture, and iso. You can set up little demos for yourself to experiment with depth of field or bluring/freezing motion. Plenty of info online, but I like the idea mentioned of a basic photography book. Easier to flip back and forth between topics and you can take it with you to where ever you may go to enjoy your leisure time. I would get a basic book that is NOT specific to your camera to keep it simple at first. After getting the basics straight in your head, start going through your menus. See what each setting does. They should all make good sense if you took some time to learn the basic exposure principles first. Take some notes as you go through the menus of things that interest you. Change things and try them out. Learn how to reset your camera to put things back to normal so you won't ever be afraid of messing anything up.</p><p></p><p>Here is a video I like to recommend:</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8T94sdiNjc" target="_blank">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8T94sdiNjc</a></p><p></p><p>You could try to recreate his examples indoors.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nickt, post: 405324, member: 4923"] You can certainly learn and practice indoors. If there is enough light to see, you can take pictures. Some shots might be high iso shots or flash shots, but its all good. You can practice learning the relationship of shutter, aperture, and iso. You can set up little demos for yourself to experiment with depth of field or bluring/freezing motion. Plenty of info online, but I like the idea mentioned of a basic photography book. Easier to flip back and forth between topics and you can take it with you to where ever you may go to enjoy your leisure time. I would get a basic book that is NOT specific to your camera to keep it simple at first. After getting the basics straight in your head, start going through your menus. See what each setting does. They should all make good sense if you took some time to learn the basic exposure principles first. Take some notes as you go through the menus of things that interest you. Change things and try them out. Learn how to reset your camera to put things back to normal so you won't ever be afraid of messing anything up. Here is a video I like to recommend: [URL]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8T94sdiNjc[/URL] You could try to recreate his examples indoors. [/QUOTE]
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