I would suggest that you look at one of the Cannons that has a LED screen that you can turn around to face you. My Cannon is older has a focus mode that will lock once it finds the focus. I looked at a new high end Cannon when I bought a new printer. It had a screen that you could fold out and turn around just like mine. My camera and that camera also has a "a live mode" that opens the shutter so you can see to compose the image just like yours. In your case you could see yourself and move or change positions as needed. I often photograph things like mushrooms or flowers. They are close to the ground and this old man has a hard time getting up and down. I put my camera on a tripod and use the image on the screen to frame the image. I set my exposure and all I have to do is bend down a bit. I either depress the shutter button or most of the time I gently touch the screen. The "shutter" opens and the photo is taken. You can use your remote. I can see instantly if it is what I want. If not I change the settings and shoot again. When I was working as a photographer I use a 4X5 film camera. Our SOP was to take five images--two underexpose, one right on and two over according to the light meter. Sometimes I still do the same thing, but being able to see the image I don't need the redundancy except when the light is interesting and I want to experiment. Sometimes a few stops under yields a better image. And of course there's Photoshop. I enjoy your work. Thank you!
Hi , how are you today, Focusing a Self Portrait with Brooke Shaden - "Thật tuyệt vời,Tôi rất quý trọng youtube này của chị ."Cô là giáo viên của tôi "
1:45 a duck outside the window.
lol That's a bike.
you're right ! now I cant see a duck anymore no matter long many times I look at it.
Learn to capture movement and glee in your self portraits with this clip from Brooke Shaden's 'Master Your Craft': cr8.lv/brooke100-gp
looking good
I usually just use an old tripod with a ballcap on top to focus on.
genius
you are awesome i love your courses
I would suggest that you look at one of the Cannons that has a LED screen that you can turn around to face you. My Cannon is older has a focus mode that will lock once it finds the focus. I looked at a new high end Cannon when I bought a new printer. It had a screen that you could fold out and turn around just like mine. My camera and that camera also has a "a live mode" that opens the shutter so you can see to compose the image just like yours. In your case you could see yourself and move or change positions as needed. I often photograph things like mushrooms or flowers. They are close to the ground and this old man has a hard time getting up and down. I put my camera on a tripod and use the image on the screen to frame the image. I set my exposure and all I have to do is bend down a bit. I either depress the shutter button or most of the time I gently touch the screen. The "shutter" opens and the photo is taken. You can use your remote. I can see instantly if it is what I want. If not I change the settings and shoot again. When I was working as a photographer I use a 4X5 film camera. Our SOP was to take five images--two underexpose, one right on and two over according to the light meter. Sometimes I still do the same thing, but being able to see the image I don't need the redundancy except when the light is interesting and I want to experiment. Sometimes a few stops under yields a better image. And of course there's Photoshop. I enjoy your work. Thank you!
I love Brooke!
She is good!
Get yourself an add-on shutter remote switch.
I find her camera to be much too high, it's looking down so will give a bad perspective to her body
she seems crazy
but the good kind :)
Brooke, je t'aime ! >3
Brooke is a bride in this video. Or just dressed like one!
Hi , how are you today,
Focusing a Self Portrait with Brooke Shaden - "Thật tuyệt vời,Tôi rất quý trọng youtube này của chị ."Cô là giáo viên của tôi "