How I IMPROVED my PHOTOGRAPHY - The lightbulb moments

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 366

  • @NigelDanson
    @NigelDanson  4 года назад +67

    If you've been watching for a while but haven't subscribed yet, please consider it! it's free! 👍🏼

    • @SFbayArea94121
      @SFbayArea94121 4 года назад +1

      Nigel Danson nice hat 🧢

    • @listonheinz9103
      @listonheinz9103 4 года назад +2

      Only 13% hit the bell? That’s interesting I must say. I myself did that the day I subscribed... we, the 13 percenters, are the true fans I reckon.

    • @paulbarnard5267
      @paulbarnard5267 4 года назад +7

      I never use the bell. I subscribe to channels so that I see the channel in my subscribed list. When I have time to look at RUclips then I click on my subscribed list and there are all the new videos from my favourite channels ready for me to watch when I’m able to. I certainly don’t need notifications that new content has been uploaded when I’m at work or sat on the loo. Ive never seen the point of the bell.

    • @bernardolorenaponte9896
      @bernardolorenaponte9896 4 года назад +1

      Great video once again! What aboua a video on the challenge of planning and running workshops! Thank you for sharing your knowledge!

    • @ddinning1
      @ddinning1 4 года назад

      Hi Nigel, the bell icon is unavailable, at least for me. All other channels work ok for me. When I click on it it says: 'This action is turned off for content that is made for children'. Worth checking your channel settings perhaps??

  • @llewdis
    @llewdis 3 года назад +55

    “I just took the scene rather than compose the scene.” - That is a pearl of wisdom that REALLY resonated with me.

  • @mainmain5303
    @mainmain5303 4 года назад +15

    Someone with 200k subscribers, those dazzling pictures and with your humility...talking like a student and teaching all the way. Hmm. So rare so good! Thank you Nigel!

  • @ZioFeda
    @ZioFeda 4 года назад +60

    This is by far one of the most inspirational videos about photography I've ever watched. It's not just about how good your photos look, or how long your journey has been. It's more about the character it shows, the effort that you've made to get to where you wanted to be. If I had been in your shoes, I'd probably have thought "oh well, I know how to do B\W like a pro, therefore I must be a B\W photographer". And I would have stopped there. And then I'd have thought "Oh well, if pictures with long lenses come easier to me, that must be my niche". And I'd have kept doing that. And your work shows that you'd probably have been amazing at both. That sort of drive, that's what I've been missing for most of my life, and people like you help people like me to stop sitting on their asses and try and assess what they want to become. It's about photography, but it's about experiencing life, really.

  • @mitchell4217
    @mitchell4217 4 года назад +6

    Nice to see when the pros share their lightbulb moments and "failures". Just goes to show that even the best learn through failing.

  • @tonyflynn8629
    @tonyflynn8629 4 года назад +122

    I hope that one day I am as good as you were when you were bad!

  • @AdamBuckley1964
    @AdamBuckley1964 4 года назад +12

    Great idea for a vid - I'd have to say that the biggest progression for me was getting non-family/friends to critique your photos. Your Mum is always going to love your photos!

  • @niftytwo
    @niftytwo 4 года назад +4

    Hi Nigel. It’s great to see your trials and the success & failures. I’m certainly on the same road as you once were. I’ve only been learning for 3 years now & I’m in my 70’s. Trying. Failing & doing it all again. I appreciate your commitment and it gives me the strength to keep learning. Failing and trying. Thank you. Neville.

  • @bernardfleming8998
    @bernardfleming8998 4 года назад +3

    Tracking your journey as a landscape photographer from the 80's to the present was an excellent idea. Self reflection and honesty goes a long way to revelling the passion you have
    developed into becoming a master craftsman. I really look forward to watching your weekly thoughts and ideas. Best wishes!

  • @djolley61
    @djolley61 4 года назад

    I appreciate your humility at being able to criticize your own work. A few years ago I took a design class (helped my photography a great deal) and black and white photography class. I thought I knew quite a bit, but realized I had a lot to learn. Also the "crit" session in both classes where the instructor and other student comment and criticize your work was pretty humbling--and instructive.

  • @neilhutchins75
    @neilhutchins75 4 года назад +1

    One of the best and most inspiring photography videos I have seen for a while on RUclips

  • @heatherhornbackphoto
    @heatherhornbackphoto 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing your beginnings! I'm a brand-new photographer that has fallen in love with landscape photography and I've been watching all your videos and it's helped me so much already.

  • @johnr.watson7500
    @johnr.watson7500 3 года назад

    This is probably the best 19 minutes I've spent in many years learning about photography. At last I now believe I know what "telling a story" means in the context of landscape photography, and come to think of it, some other genres as well. Thank you, Nigel!

  • @mwledeboer
    @mwledeboer 4 года назад +2

    It is lovely to hear your progression as a photographer, which gives me hope that I can arrive at a similar point. I have found that the big struggle has always been balancing the time commitment for family and hobbies to allow for improvement of my landscape photography. On the up side, as my kids grew up, my sport and portrait photography skills grew by leaps and bounds and that has still allowed to grow as a photographer. Love your videos Nigel.

  • @1spitfirepilot
    @1spitfirepilot 4 года назад +5

    I think this is one of your most helpful videos. Thinking about what needs improving, and showing what you've done is key. We all need to do that.

  • @emilemontiere6128
    @emilemontiere6128 4 года назад +17

    I certaintly think b/w shots give more atmosphere. I have never really done much in b/w but seeing yours has given me some inspiration. And its barley cos it flops over, wheat stands up.

  • @jhonnybakkenphotography
    @jhonnybakkenphotography 4 года назад +9

    Thanks for sharing Your older images. I guess this show that anything is possible if you just work hard for it. "Never give up" fits in Photography just as much as every other places. Best wishes to all.

  • @chrisridge9659
    @chrisridge9659 2 года назад

    catching up with many of your videos, you generosity of sharong is amazing, thank you. So many things you've said in this video is so easily identifiable to me.

  • @loicba
    @loicba 4 года назад +1

    I loved this episode! Sometimes it feels like I am not improving as much as I would like but seeing your pictures really showed that it takes time to gain experience and get better at it! I think this video also recaps pretty well the most important lesson I learned from your videos: your need to see a photo as elements in a scene, not just seeing it as a beautiful scene.

  • @highlandmediaalba699
    @highlandmediaalba699 4 года назад +14

    Love your channel, love the calm atmosphere you create when narrating. I love also the way you connect to your audience on such a personal level. I am sure so many of us watching can point on at least one thing in each one of your videos where it feels like we once were in our lives. Keep it up! Glad to see you're say and doing well :)

  • @Hockleberry
    @Hockleberry 4 года назад

    Thank you for this! Been a big fan for about a year now. As a photography novice, it really helps to see your tutorial videos and also see how you started out and improved.

  • @edwinscox
    @edwinscox 4 года назад

    Nigel, your authenticity is one of your greatest strengths. Thank you for sharing your journey with us. Very helpful. Some of my current landscapes look like your old ones, so I know there is hope!

  • @lorenbrand
    @lorenbrand 4 года назад

    Hi Nigel You can tell your subscribers who are worried about notifications pinging a lot during the day about this. There's an option in RUclips to receive all your notifications (the ones where you've clicked the bell) in one batch at any time of the day. I chose 5pm which works for me. It's a really useful service! I just happened to specifically watch this video at 9am today because I saw your post about it on Instagram yesterday. Thanks for another great video!

  • @SuburbanWhiteBoy4lif
    @SuburbanWhiteBoy4lif 4 года назад +1

    That photo of your kid being scared by that bug is amazing. I love it!

  • @RobertSmith-re5vy
    @RobertSmith-re5vy 4 года назад +1

    Enjoy your photography path from the beginning. I have only been an amateur photographer since 2017 but can relate with my early quality and the progress I have made up to now. I have learned from your RUclips videos along with those from Thomas Heaton, Mads Peter Iverson, Mark Denney, Simon Baxter and others. Of course, I learn the most from "playing" with the camera and LR/PS. Thanks for all your help. I enjoy your videos very much and look forward to a new each Sunday.

  • @larryrudnick1519
    @larryrudnick1519 4 года назад

    Very interesting thoughts. The idea of just shooting a pretty scene rather than composing an image is one I've struggled with and didn't really understand until you articulated it. Thank you!

  • @joaodomingues1559
    @joaodomingues1559 2 года назад +1

    Hello Nigel. I’m somewhat ‘tired’ of this kind of improve composition videos, but, this one was great to watch. Really enjoyed, maybe because In some extent I reviewed my own story! 😊 This was an excellent insight and still learned something I think. I took a lot of inspiration from your work, photos and videos. Well done and thank you! 😉

  • @naturebypamfitzpatrick2855
    @naturebypamfitzpatrick2855 4 года назад

    Thank you for this video, Nigel! I have learned so much from you over the last year and a half. This video struck a different chord within me. Seeing the progression of your work is encouraging. I am seeing my work improve over time but it helps to be reminded that great photographers aren't just born great photographers. Someone may be born with a passion for photography but great photographers are ones who have worked at harnessing their creativity and honing their craft. Thank you for sharing your journey with us.

  • @jaywilliamsphoto
    @jaywilliamsphoto 4 года назад

    I think photography is just like anything else in life. You evolve, learn and grow. One day something doesn’t make sense then the next it does and it unlocks the next phase. I believe it’s how you apply yourself to a problem and experience which determines the speed with which you unlock knowledge. As you mentioned Nigel, there were setbacks in the 2000’s for you, and that’s exactly it, life happens. But if we keep taking one step forward towards a goal, then eventually we can unlock the knowledge to our next phase and grow. And as you have done here, reflectivity on the past can help appreciate the present. 👍

  • @andrewsgray
    @andrewsgray 4 года назад +10

    Great to see your journey in images Nigel, always interesting to see how we progress and develop!

  • @crowtheri
    @crowtheri 4 года назад

    Storytelling is so important, in connection with technical elements that develop through ‘getting out’ in the field. Great to see how success unfolds through the hard yards of environment and experience. Thanks, Nigel 🙏👍🏻

  • @scotty4418
    @scotty4418 4 года назад

    An inspirational episode Nigel as it demonstrated that we all start from a point in our photographic journey and patience and perseverance will be necessary companions in order to undertake the journey and improve, which by your candidacy showed some of the key stages you have went through

  • @JulieCourtJacob
    @JulieCourtJacob 4 года назад

    It's really neat to see the 'before' vs the 'after' and see the changes and evolutions! Really inspirational.

  • @ninalange3574
    @ninalange3574 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for your honest story, Nigel. This is one of the videos I enjoyed most on your channel so far!

  • @tobi.w
    @tobi.w 4 года назад +1

    It's great to see your old black&white photos. I don't know how popular photography was in the 80's, but would you have thought that in a few decades photography will be so popular? I mean with a smartphone everyone is a 'photographer' nowadays.

  • @susannepayne8425
    @susannepayne8425 4 года назад

    I've just started watching your videos. Besides being interesting and helpful to me, you come across as being sincere and humble - a good human.

  • @b9oconnell
    @b9oconnell 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for posting this really thoughful and helpful video. Really great to see how you evolved and improved--truly inspirational!

  • @johnlorenz6795
    @johnlorenz6795 4 года назад

    Wow. I have followed you for some time now and I learn much from you. But, this video is especially meaningful to me. As you share self-critique of photo images of the past, you really did a nice job of explaining the whys and wherefores of what you saw then and how you would do it differently now. For instance, I could understand your struggle with seeing in color but thinking in B&W and trying to figure out why the color image disappointed. I am there right now! Composition and contrast, too. I think it's that you are being candid with insight into your thought process then vs now more than a 'dry' offering of technical instruction. It's like, we're sitting across the table and 'Yes, you're answering questions I didn't know how to ask', if you know what I'm trying to say here. Thanks Nigel!

  • @ExplorationsbyRod
    @ExplorationsbyRod 4 года назад +1

    I always enjoy your videos, keep up the great content. Right now I feel like I am in a photography slump. I have only been taking pictures since Christmas of 2015, but I feel like my progression has almost stalled. I want to improve, so I keep studying others work, watching videos to get ideas to try. You are an inspiration for me.

  • @peterg3021
    @peterg3021 4 года назад

    This current situation has at least provided me with opportunity to go through the hard drives and look at and reprocess a range of photos I've taken over the years. My process then compared to now has noticeably changed. Enjoying the trips down memory lane too. Good to see your journey through photography also Nigel.

  • @charlesmoor111
    @charlesmoor111 4 года назад

    Hey nigel. Maybe you could do a video about when your thinking to enter pictures to win competitions, how would one go about doing that?
    And maybe talk about what happened for you when you won for sun tree etc

  • @emmy6956
    @emmy6956 Год назад

    Really appreciate this video - as well as many others of yours! It's really helping me look with a more disciplined perspective now, after so many years of dabbling in photography.

  • @Bazzasphotolife
    @Bazzasphotolife 4 года назад +2

    Incredible self-reflective piece perfect for me as I struggle the most with landscape. Thanks for your honesty and pro tips. I also struggle with getting out due to family/busy city life.

  • @okvaale2548
    @okvaale2548 3 года назад

    Indeed interesting to observe the learning process. Thanks Nigel for sharing this.

  • @djrthewanderer1989
    @djrthewanderer1989 3 года назад

    Read some of the reviews, people can be so cruel. I’ve learned a lot from your videos, keep them coming. Good job Nigel.

  • @bostonxpat
    @bostonxpat 4 года назад +1

    I've been taking pictures for a long time, since I was about 11. When I first started, as with most people, I took pictures of what was in my limited universe. Eventually I started looking at things differently, and bought many art books by various masters to get a perspective on the way they viewed their universes. When Lautrec paints people in a cafe he saw it very differently than those people sitting in that cafe and that was part of his brilliance. I'm certainly not putting myself at that level of artistry of course, but your point is well taken that it takes a lot of learning to look at things a in a way to be able to express them truly artistically.

  • @MrIanfurniss
    @MrIanfurniss 4 года назад +95

    I see from your knuckles that you entered the Canon/Nikon debate. Always risky!

    • @Avinash-wg7xl
      @Avinash-wg7xl 4 года назад +5

      nikon won the bout

    • @SFbayArea94121
      @SFbayArea94121 4 года назад +6

      Awy Nikon hit em with “da canon” 💥🔫💨

    • @crowtheri
      @crowtheri 4 года назад +6

      Look what you have started, Ian ;)

    • @Ricodj1309
      @Ricodj1309 4 года назад +6

      @@SFbayArea94121 that's the point Canon is so good even Nikon uses a canon😉😂

    • @martharetallick204
      @martharetallick204 4 года назад +4

      No, it's the DSLR vs. mirrorless debate. 😀

  • @geraldclarke8868
    @geraldclarke8868 4 года назад +2

    Midway through grasping the lightbulb, and enjoying my photography more and more because of advice and encouragement from ND and his peers! Great!!

  • @M0nkee_mode
    @M0nkee_mode 3 года назад

    I am 14 now at the beginning of my photo journey so this is relatable to a point

  • @projektphotovisions
    @projektphotovisions 4 года назад

    After 7 years I see the same mistakes in my works and the way of thinking. Great to see the progress - the best reward is to know You are improving in something You love! Stay Safe Nigel!

  • @ArnaudPecqueriePhotographie
    @ArnaudPecqueriePhotographie 4 года назад

    Your story resonates for me. We share common way in our photography, but I’m half way. Thank to your video, I’m improving and keep working to feel the gap. About the bell, I’m one of them. I didn’t click on it. Neither with your colleagues. I watch the video of all of you from the latest to the newest. Those days, I have a week delay but the content is what is matter to me.

  • @antonoat
    @antonoat 4 года назад +3

    "Fantastic to see you again" Loving the channel Nigel, thanks for sharing all you do! Loved seeing your early photos, proof it's a lifelong passion! I miss my D200, at it's base iso (200) it had fantastic image quality. Cheers.

  • @stillinthestream
    @stillinthestream 4 года назад +3

    I thoroughly enjoyed the journey through your evolving experience and understanding of landscape photography. Instructive and inspiring.

  • @davehayford4294
    @davehayford4294 4 года назад

    Nigel.....thank you for sharing........awesomeness at its best Friend.

  • @andyjsmith1981
    @andyjsmith1981 4 года назад +1

    Another great insight Nigel, the photo of the waterfall in Yosemite I saw in one of your other videos and I just love it, i have never been there but you get a real sense of the size and power of that waterfall through the black and white image and the tree just gives it such a scale, thanks for keeping us going! Look forward to the mid-week installment! All the best.

  • @RichardRostant1
    @RichardRostant1 4 года назад

    I find the videos where you break down the composition to be very helpful. Nigel knows composition!

  • @davidp1288
    @davidp1288 4 года назад

    Another great video. I see your first camera was an Ilford. My first camera was an Ilford instamatic which I got when I was 9. It came with a 12/24 film cassette in black and white only and I loved it. I fell out of love with photography when digital started and only came back to it in 2017 when I went to New Zealand. The love affair has started again and now I am retired I have more time to indulge (coved-19 permitting). Channels like yours provides excellent inspiration.

  • @williamcharlesworth4617
    @williamcharlesworth4617 4 года назад

    Nigel, It was good to hear your story about your journey to good composition. I too am on that journey. Have been house bound by the pandemic, and feel like my momentum has taken a set back. Have tried macro lately, just to keep work on focus and lighting, but composition is my passion. Thank you for sharing the little things you concentrated on that became very large in the growth of your art. Maybe there is hope for me too. Bill.

  • @melissam731
    @melissam731 4 года назад +2

    Enjoyed listening to your journey. Interesting tip about using a long lens. Sometimes I get overwhelmed by large landscapes and not sure where to focus. Thank you!

  • @cmichaelhaugh8517
    @cmichaelhaugh8517 4 года назад

    Thank you for this Nigel. Combined with a local gallery’s weekly subject-specific contest, this is forcing me to take a longer view of my work. I can see several avenues for improvement - very exciting!

  • @RogersaurusRex
    @RogersaurusRex 4 года назад

    Thanks for this video, to me it's one of your best. I've been watching and learning for a long time, but seeing your older images along with your descriptions of what didn't work well and how you've improved over time with thought and practice is a really powerful motivator. The first 12 or 14 minutes has a lot of similarity with my own photo history. I have photos that fit every stage you went through. I have old b/w film shots that are better than anything I took in my early DSLR days. I remember being really proud of some photos with my 20D that I no-longer much care for as well as being disappointed I couldn't capture a beautiful scene in a photo that had any impact approaching what it was like to be there. Everyone knows that time and practice help and seeing someone with great skill comparing old photos to new ones is always going to be interesting, but the details you included make all the difference. The timelines for the changes in format/cameras, that there was a period where you were using a lot of contrast and saturation or over-darkening the sky because dramatic felt like it meant good are all things I, and I assume a lot of your viewers, went through as well. It's really inspiring to see that while I/we may never have the same dedication to practice and improve, we have the potential to keep learning and improving with the work and thought we put in to it. Thanks for not just reminding us that learning and growing is a journey, but by grounding that story to what I assume are many of our shared experiences to help it really hit home.

  • @daemon1143
    @daemon1143 3 года назад

    Seeing the development in your images and style across your life like this was a real learning experience. Thanks.

  • @SimonPhillipsPhoto
    @SimonPhillipsPhoto 4 года назад

    Great video Nigel, I went out today to take some photos of places around me since I can't go that far at the moment and I only took one lens with me which was 45mm lens. I was looking at the photos once I got home this evening and they lack a lot. I think its that story line, wrong time of the day, to much to look at within the scene and I felt a bit down over this. But its not something I like to shoot as I normally like to shoot landscapes and your photos I can see where I went wrong today and what I want to shoot. I have these ideas in my head of places I want to photograph but I currently can't get there yet with travel restrictions. Great to see where you started and you finding your way over the year and only in the more recent years you've really found your way and its like everything just clicked together and you now what to do with the scene. Love your work Nigel!

  • @carlosvanvegas
    @carlosvanvegas 4 года назад

    Great to see your journey Nigel

  • @tarryho
    @tarryho 4 года назад

    You journey thru you photos are an amazing one... Thank you for all your insights... such a journey it is... have a fantastic and safe week:))))

  • @UncompressedWAVmusic
    @UncompressedWAVmusic 4 года назад

    Congrats on improving your photos over the years. Thanks for the great examples and explaining them.

  • @whafrog
    @whafrog 4 года назад

    Really appreciate the honesty here, so useful to see others have been through similar struggles.

  • @ocubex
    @ocubex 4 года назад

    Great video, nice to hear tips that do not rest solely on gear... very refreshing.

  • @ashleymorris9603
    @ashleymorris9603 4 года назад

    That was a great video. Thanks for the undertone of patience which is something I struggle with regarding my photography. I am also a dad with two kids and struggle to get out to do landscapes. It was somewhere reassuring to see you have been through the same challenges. I learnt allot from this!

  • @G0FUW
    @G0FUW 4 года назад

    Nice reflection Nigel. Lots of points ring true here too. Successes on film were few and far between and I don't understand why people would want to go back to those days when the learning curve was so long, and so so expensive. Looking forward to seeing what images have been put in for the competition. Hope you raise lots more!

  • @aokinnz6885
    @aokinnz6885 4 года назад

    I love watching/listening to your thought process. Thanks so much for your knowledge!

  • @bethtribe1399
    @bethtribe1399 3 года назад

    So great to see your journey. You really brought home some good points that I needed to hear. Thank you and give Pebbles a pat for me.

  • @pictureeyecandy
    @pictureeyecandy 4 года назад

    LOL, when the lightbulb turns on! 👍

  • @WayneRobertsonPhotography
    @WayneRobertsonPhotography 4 года назад

    I enjoyed watching, I think it's always a worthwhile exercise to go through your library of photographs. It brings back a lot of memories and you can learn a lot from it.

  • @brianbrooking496
    @brianbrooking496 4 года назад

    Another great vlog Nigel. I loved your photographic journey of discovery, some beautiful shots in there. Some great tips and advice. I’m slowly learning from the likes of yourself and other vloggers and magazines. There were a few things in there that I had not considered. Shooting the scene for example, now I understand. Great bit of gold dust. You lived in California, now the baseball cap makes sense, mystery solved, great video.

  • @johncameron6853
    @johncameron6853 3 года назад

    What a fascinating insight into your photographic journey, amazing what people go through for their art, glad you came out the other end as you did. 😎

  • @Pingoinnn
    @Pingoinnn 4 года назад

    WOW ! I was captivated the whole time, great channel discovery for me here !
    And thank you a lot for showing that we CAN take good landscapes with a long lense ! I always feel crappy when I read that "you can't take a landscape if your lens is shorter than 16mm". Keep going !

  • @brianloeffler6551
    @brianloeffler6551 2 года назад

    I really enjoyed this video as I enjoyed how you evolved over time with your photography. I completely agree on nailing the foreground. It is something of a challenge here in Arizona but it is getting there 😊.

  • @HR-wd6cw
    @HR-wd6cw 3 года назад

    I think the one way people can really improve their photography is just by shooting. I ran into the same brick wall myself when starting out where I would read all I couild about photography, the techniques, the genres, and even followed on social media, famous photographers online but I realized after a while that while I had the technical skills down and could calculate equivalent exposures for example, I needed to get out and shoot. And I think that's where the "good/great" photographers improve and everyone else sort of gets stuck... they know the technical, now they need to go and apply it and challenge themselves. Even if you're new, I'd say go out and shoot. Once you have basic exposure theory down, and even before you learn about composition -- just shooting will help you improve because you'll learn and develop as you go, as I feel photography is one of those things that you learn by doing, once you have the foundation (ie. basic exposure theory) mastered. Composition will push you even further too, but you have to get out and shoot first, and continue to shoot, learning from your mistakes and trying new things. You can only do so much by just reading and following others on social media and videos.
    I would even go as far as forget about the gear, or more rather, the brand or how old your gear is. As long as you have a camera that's maybe made within the past 10 years, and a set of lenses (primes or the trinity of lenses or something similar) that's all you need. The improvement will be made through experience, and whether you're shooting with a 10 year old kit or a brand new kit, the same photography principles still apply. So "forget" about the gear and focus on your shooting. Over time you will find that you need to add or remove pieces of gear from your kit, but that's part of the learning process too. Figuring out what you need for the types of photos you want to make, but you won't figure this out unless you go out and shoot.

  • @glttheriault
    @glttheriault 4 года назад

    That was great to see your progression and how you have changed. I really like how you explained the changes you have made in order to get where you are now. The photo with the sun inside it is amazing! Thanks for sharing and can't wait to see your next one!

  • @michaelkhalsa
    @michaelkhalsa 2 года назад

    Thanks Nigel,
    I thought I would share a couple areas over the years that has made a difference for me, and to see overlap or if anyone can benefits from my2 cents:
    To have enough light on the foreground (90% of the time).
    Getting color balance right for each scene - often when a shot has a great composition, but it just does not look right on the screen, the colors are off.
    To open up scenes. Particularly in Capture One when lens falloff is not automatically corrected, the first thing I do is bring it to 100%. This then changes the overall balance in the scene. I have found that for landscape, most of the time I want an open look from no vignetting.
    A couple times I focused on the same scene like every day for a month. Different moods, times of day, light. My purpose was not to try to get the best shot ever (although of course that is always nice), rather to really understand the nature of light, color, contrast, softness, hardness, hand-held, tripod, etc. When I first did this, my photography jumped to another level. It brings cognition. It is like riding horses, in the beginning we work to get everything right, and then on a long trail ride in the mountains where you are beyond sore, you have to relax and let the rhythm and connection take the lead. That is when you become a good rider. I believe the same in photography, where the connection takes the lead, and you intuit the lens choices, the moments, the composition that is natural for the connection, and the abilities become second nature to make it so.
    Doing my own printing (with pigment inks and a good assortment of papers on hand) has really improved my photography. On screen, because we can move so easily from one picture to the next, an image can look great for the short time we are viewing it. But on a print, we sometimes look at it for like an hour, absorbed in it. We both see its beauty and nuance over the details to bring it to perfection. A shot that stands well in print, is a composition, lighting, texture that can endure.

  • @enduraman1
    @enduraman1 4 года назад

    Telling your personal photography story always makes for a good video, well done.

  • @JasonLorette
    @JasonLorette 3 года назад

    It's awesome to look back and see those 'moments' where our journey turned and we left forward...still working on it myself. :)

  • @overlandphotography
    @overlandphotography 4 года назад

    I enjoyed watching your progression as a photographer Nigel.... tks mate

  • @alanbaff
    @alanbaff 3 года назад

    This is great Nige, so good to see your journey, Iv pretty much covered the same steps myself except the nirvana stage towards the end! This gives me faith and hope in my own journey, thanks very much 👊

  • @zeljkomihalic55
    @zeljkomihalic55 4 года назад

    I have to say this - love your work. But apart from the work itself, I really love the passion you put into your stories and really enjoy hearing you tell them. Picture does tell a story, but experiences around the pictures presented tend to add another dimension to the artistic impression . Thank you! Regards from Croatia

    • @NigelDanson
      @NigelDanson  4 года назад

      Thanks so much really appreciate that

  • @thatdeafguyuk
    @thatdeafguyuk 4 года назад +1

    Never apologise for starting photography in a darkroom, it's the best way to learn.

  • @celinemorisset5533
    @celinemorisset5533 4 года назад

    Thanks Nigel, as always you are very interesting and have such great experience to share with us. Keep up the great work!

  • @rawchrisbrown
    @rawchrisbrown 4 года назад

    Good to see how far you have come. Mam Tor is great and I love how its pretty near me. I did think I over shot it, but since lockdown I cant wait to get back out there.

  • @siomurchu
    @siomurchu 4 года назад

    Great video Nigel, there is so much to be learned and improved on in landscape photography. By the way, when you click the bell icon (on a mobile) there is a new 'Personalised' option but it doesn't take you anywhere. I selected it yesterday to get a reminder for today's video but no reminder came, perhaps this is why you are seeing low numbers in the stats.

  • @Giles29
    @Giles29 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and experience with us

  • @DavidSkok1
    @DavidSkok1 4 года назад

    Really helpful and inspirational for us amateurs that are still early in that journey. Thanks!!

  • @fredagmedfoto1863
    @fredagmedfoto1863 4 года назад

    Very interesting video and also very inspiring for me. I haven't been doing photography for that long time, and I learn every time I go out. But getting my first wide angle lens has helped me finding the foreground elements that I have always been inspired by from photographers. The one with the grass is actually one of my most inspiring pictures and I tried it out in a lake the other weekend with a tree as my main subject. It didn't turn out very well, but if I hadn't been watching your videos I would certainly never have even thought about the leading lines in the grass. One day I'll get a good shot that has that element!
    Thanks for sharing, and thanks for inspiring!!

  • @veronikaambrozova1888
    @veronikaambrozova1888 4 года назад

    I like your videos especially for the way you explain things. It has been an amazing progress of your photography skills 😲👌🏼 really helpful tips, thanks for sharing with us.

  • @garystephenson5278
    @garystephenson5278 4 года назад

    Really enjoying all your videos and tutorials, Nigel. I've been a new subscriber since finding your channel just after lockdown. Thanks for the effort you put in and for sharing your knowledge.

  • @marcherrmann9635
    @marcherrmann9635 4 года назад

    Thanks for making us all save a lot of time by not having to go through the full learning process on our own, but rather to adopt some of your experiences and improve faster. I'm very grateful for that!
    Btw, reason why I nonetheless won't hit that bell icon, although that feature certainly is able to push a bit your channel's rating, simply is in the fact that I don't wish to become annoyed by notifications that I will anyway never need as I look to your content each and every day thanks to my subscription. Hope you will understand this ;-)

  • @MSACoachMike
    @MSACoachMike 4 года назад +2

    Nice touch having three bare lights in the background for your "lighbulb" moments. ;-)

  • @TheMoodyPhotographer
    @TheMoodyPhotographer 4 года назад +8

    Nice progression, it gives a lot of hope ❤️✌🏻
    What I find interesting is that the first couple of photos were taken as I was smth like 6 years old 😆😅

  • @thebr0wnhornet
    @thebr0wnhornet 4 года назад

    I enjoyed this vid. I haven’t clicked the bell bc I hate notifications and you post at the same time every week. Notifications are not necessary, don’t let it get you down

  • @JoDaniels
    @JoDaniels 4 года назад

    Fantastic story on sharing your photography experience as of the very beginning. I learned a lot and also gained a lot of photography-tools-awareness in the field based on your videos.
    I never stop exploring :), and continue working in picking out details/objects out of a landscape with a Long Lens and adding foregrounds to it by using a Wide Angel Lens and finding my own style! Many Thanks for this great Video👌