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(22 reviews)
Author: Visit Amazon's Rob Sheppard Page
ISBN : 1454702451
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Format: PDF, EPUB
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About the Author
Rob Sheppard is a long-time photographer, respected writer, internationally known speaker and workshop leader, and was the long-time editor of the prestigious Outdoor Photographer magazine. He was also one of the principals who started Digital Photo (formerly PCPhoto) magazine over a decade ago to bring the digital world to photographers on their terms. Rob has served as the group editorial director of all Werner Publication photo magazines (Digital Photo, Outdoor Photographer, and Digital Photo Pro) and has written hundreds of articles about photography and nature, plus a wide range of books. His photography has been published in many magazines, ranging from National Geographic to The Farmer to, of course, Outdoor Photographer and Digital Photo. His website for photo tips, plus workshop and book information, is at www.robsheppardphoto.com. He is a regular contributor to Pixiq.com.
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- Paperback: 192 pages
- Publisher: Pixiq; Revised edition (September 6, 2011)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1454702451
- ISBN-13: 978-1454702450
- Product Dimensions: 0.7 x 8.5 x 10.8 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Free Download New Epson Complete Guide to Digital Printing
The single best book I've bought on inkjet printing and here is why. First, I'm tired of a great many people complaining, or talking about speed, when it comes to taking pictures and then processing them. Many people who have come to enjoy photography due the the advances in technology never struggled through hours and days in a darkroom developing and printing photo's. Read a book by Ansel Adams and learn how he created those wonderful images. He didn't just pop in the darkroom, throw the film in the "soup" and then print the perfect images every time. There is no shortcut to creating beautiful images. It all starts from mastering your equipment so that the controls become intuitive. I've never understood any photographer who wanted to leave the "darkroom" process to another and "just shoot." The author of this book, which I wasn't going to buy initially but thankfully I read paragraph that changed my mind to purchase it, understands that. Only you know how a scene felt at the moment you clicked the shutter. Only you have the knowledge of what "you saw and felt" (to quote Ansel). Only you can convey that sentiment to others, therefore, you must be willing to master the equipment and techniques and then put in the time necessary to create prints that express the emotion you felt at the moment you took the shot. This is an art form not an assembly line. I think one of the biggest problems people have is that you all take way too many photos hoping for a great one out of the bunch; then you spend so much time editing them down that you lose interest in the joy of processing an image. Get a tripod, take fewer shots, but more thought out shots, and just work with a few images.
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