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New Member Introductions
yet another new person
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<blockquote data-quote="eurotrash" data-source="post: 95293" data-attributes="member: 9237"><p>Going pro? Read lots of books, spend lots and <strong>lots</strong> of time researching various photographic techniques as well as other photographers' work and dedicate the time required to advance.</p><p></p><p></p><p>I highly recommend that you, as a person learning photography, try excersises where you tackle all your photography for one week with your camera in manual mode. You'll learn much more about light and shutter speed and fstops, much moreso than paying attention to photography forums and blogs.</p><p></p><p>Read this and do all of them:</p><p><a href="http://improvephotography.com/1415/21-things-you-can-do-today-to-change-your-photography-forever/" target="_blank">http://improvephotography.com/1415/21-things-you-can-do-today-to-change-your-photography-forever/</a></p><p></p><p>Then, </p><p>Grab yourself a macro lens to shoot your fishies and start experimenting in manual photography! Good luck! ..Or, a 50mm.. Either would likely work pretty well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="eurotrash, post: 95293, member: 9237"] Going pro? Read lots of books, spend lots and [B]lots[/B] of time researching various photographic techniques as well as other photographers' work and dedicate the time required to advance. I highly recommend that you, as a person learning photography, try excersises where you tackle all your photography for one week with your camera in manual mode. You'll learn much more about light and shutter speed and fstops, much moreso than paying attention to photography forums and blogs. Read this and do all of them: [url]http://improvephotography.com/1415/21-things-you-can-do-today-to-change-your-photography-forever/[/url] Then, Grab yourself a macro lens to shoot your fishies and start experimenting in manual photography! Good luck! ..Or, a 50mm.. Either would likely work pretty well. [/QUOTE]
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