I learned a lot years ago when you did a lot more teaching. I love how you break down your photo shoots and explain your editing process. You have a way to simplify exposure and everything else for that matter. It is always good to get back to the basics and find ways to improve . Yes, I would love to see more teaching. Never stop learning.
Please yes, more of this. I'm tired of getting on RUclips and only see gear reviews/new tech etc. I'd love to learn more about composition, etc. The more artistic and technical aspects of photography. I know some people are probably not as interested in it, but that's just my ten cents. Thank you for what you do!
I love when you do these "back to basics" tutorials. Could you do a similar "back to basics" for speedlights? I'd really appreciate it and I'm sure many others would find it helpful as well I tend to rely on Aperture Priority (and I admit it's a crutch) but vids like this make me want to just go to manual and deal with the learning curve
Seconded - please. I know it’s not usually FroKnowsPhoto style to use on or off camera flash but would be super helpful for those of us who want to play around with it or get into that
This breaks down the triangle in an easier explanation and gives real world scenarios. When I graduated to mirrorless I read Bryan Peterson's book, Understanding exposure, which helped a lot. Great job!
Ahhhhhh.........Thank you for such a practical approach, and demonstration of these techniques. And thank you for the complete molecular breakdown. I appreciate your brutal honesty. It's nice to see that you're as hard on yourself as you are on us when reviewing our photos...lol. Up and coming photographers are led to believe that the pros, such as yourself, NEVER get a bad shot, whether it's out of focus, soft, or even a missed moment. But you've given so much information here that gives us a solid foundation. And it's highly encouraging. As you you've stated: It's up to each and every one of us to decide what we need to see. Everyone is an artist, and perception is key. I would certainly LOVE to see more of this type of content. Many thanks!!
As an amateur photographer I definitely appreciated how you broke down the exposure adjustments. I tend to flick through shutter/aperture/iso adjustments relying on the screen preview, so seeing the math was great!
One think I really appreciate is that, despite the fact that you’re going to go with the best of the best equipment that you can use due to obviously being a professional, you understand that this can be accomplished with any gear possible. Great video as always.
Dude has a huge personality but clearly has an impressive body of work. Sometimes straight takes don't translate to clicks and views on RUclips so it's refreshing when Jared does one of these vids.
And he's spot on about glass. If you get the best glass possible, that will work with any competent photographer with any competent camera. You can't make a cheaper lens get brighter apertures.
@@derbagger22 yes. Even cheaper camera body works with great lenses with minimum differences. If lens doesn't allow good amount of light, even expensive body can't give you bright and noise free images. The camera body should be secondary thing.
I am so grateful for you breaking the steps down and show how you could adjust the different ways to change the lighting, how much to focus in close and wider.
Having shot weddings on 5D Mk II and 5d Mk III for 13 years, then graduating to the EOS R5.... I have to say I am super thankful for my DSLR Experience and now I can actually use my gear to get what I'm thinking and wanting in my head. It's a perfect scenario.
310 comments as of this date and seemingly NO ONE made note of the Men in Black reference at 0:13 ? Jared, well done sir!! WELL done! Sorry it has taken 2+ years for someone to give you credit, but... That was AWESOME!
Yes I would absolutely like to see you break down more images and discussing why you chose the lens you chose. Absolutely loved this video. Thanks Jared!
Having just done a shoot the night before with live music shooting with manual settings, I went back and watched this video. It was a helpful reinforcement of what I should have done better with my shutter speed. Thanks for making this.
I enjoy these types of videos. I have been taking photos for close to 50 years and can still learn a few things. Thank you for making all the different videos that you d!
I love these type of educational videos. I like how you explain the thought that went into taking the photos you did as well as explaining the basic of exposure. I look forward to more videos like these. Thank you Jared for making this video and all the other ones you do as well.
Really enjoyed this Fro!!!! I’m a semi professional/,hobbyists for going on 50 years now and I really like to watch educational videos even to this day. Their fun and helps knock the rust off. Thanks!!!!!
This was extremely helpful. I loved how you break down each photo when it came to setting the scene, talking over settings, reviewing the math of it and what you could have done differently if you wanted something different. I would be a frequent watcher if you continued to make these videos. Great work Jared, thank you for the lessons
Thank you, I enjoyed how you used your authentic photos to explain how you "expose" for light in photos. I have been a "lazy" photographer. Since I take photos for fun, and occasionally display the ones I got "lucky" on in my home, I have not been intentional. Therefore I waste a lot of shots or come away with no keepers. Keep on doing what you're doing!
Thanks Jared, please keep on creating content like this, it's very helpful to watch your creative perspective, how you frame the scenes, your comments why you did so and what you had focused on. Also the changes you made in Lightroom to create a finished picture.
You are a great teacher and you have been so helpful to me. I am learning so much. I just finished your video on the Nikon 5600 and now I have it set up correctly. Yes please do more teaching videos, lot and lots more please. Thank you for all your time and help
Appreciate videos like this. I’m very comfortable getting in the “ballpark” for my settings but the fine tuning and composition of “story telling” are the parts I really would like to hear more about
Yes, this is something I would love to learn more about. I love how you made a story from the pictures and showed your thought process and eliminations.
Super helpful. As I hear you talk and explain exposure I hear clicking in my head. When I took up photography a year ago I wished I would’ve found your site sooner. Very simple but very effective teaching. Get up the good work and great channel content.
For someone looking to go from taking pictures to taking photographs this contained a great explanation of the triangle and composition. More of these would be great.
Between you and the book understanding exposure I’ve learned so much! I have a long way to go but I’m excited to figure this out and somehow make it a profession! Thank you!
Definitely do more videos like this! I love how you broke down exposure in the simplest of terms. I also enjoyed the methodology you use in selecting good photos. I’m looking forward to the next video!
Brilliant video. I learned loads from your video guides a few years back when I wanted to get out of auto and I love this style of education. What I love about this video is the context of the teachable moments within a real world situation / assignment. If you could pair this with the pre - eg the thought process as you take the shots - that would be amazing but even if not this type of video is super helpful and interesting!
I always enjoy watching your videos on camera gear but this video was fantastic and very educational. When you covered compensation for different stops, it was very easy to understand how you broke it down. But the best part of the video was how you talked about creating a story and covering different angles to establish different scenes. That and watching you use different f stops to create the different depths of field in real life situations such as using a certain f stop to get several rows of people without the whole audience! I learned a lot. 10 out of 10 recommend 💯💯💯
I like these types of tutorials where you explain your thinking and ideas. Also, I like that you mentioned you took ~240 photos to get the final set. That helps many beginners and amateurs to realize that even the best take a lot of photos to get the keepers. Also, the emphasis on getting the exposure close enough and selecting the best mode for the situation, in this case full manual. The ISO settings are higher than some would suggest but you are saying get the best balance for exposure and get the shot even if there is a little noise or little less color.
It's nice to see your passion for teaching. As a beginners guide, I would have spent 30 sec on Metering modes, as spot, Center, or Multi metering gives different results/histograms. That might alter all settings depending on the situation.
Great video wow. I great to see that you explained so well and detailed. Also like to see that if I dont have the tool, (lens) that I needed, I can play with my camera tools and make it happen. So the answer to your question? YES PLEASE KEEP VIDEOS LIKE THIS BECAUSE THEY HELP SO MUCH. But of course I understand how busy you are creating new material and keeping us up to date with new equipment as well. THANK YOU
I enjoyed your work with Bernie and this teaching moment to reminds me of the Nikon school of photography that I did in 1983 It was 40,000 slides pesented as Good Better and Best composition of the same image. Thank you for stepping into your teaching mode. even at 75 I am not finished learning.
I really dig this! It's absolute basics but what we forget the easiest is the basics and then for the new shooters you can't over emphasize this enough!
You make great videos. Perfect for “Atari guys”. I’m 50 and this can can get complicated quickly. Thanks for the great explications. BTW the Afro looked better than the jeri curls.
I Love these type of video's....this is how the penny dropped for me for understanding exposure...watching you break it down on paper...can't thank you enough, now I only shoot raw.
It was interesting and I appreciated it. You were good at identifying the positive views of the photos, yet you rarely mentioned their negative aspects. Even good photos, especially when taking actual events have distractions and negative elements. Several of your best photos had heads, people's bodies, objects or colors that distracted the view from the main story elements.
Great job dude! It is hard to teach/learn manual shooting without the structure and having a series of shots to take that actually require some changes. I really like the way you explained why you did what you did. I have seen many many videos on the subject of manual shooting and this one #1! I think beginners should start in manual mode and just not look back. Three things to learn for basic understanding, aperture ( f stop), shutter speed, and ISO all under control of the photographer. Necessary knowledge and practice before making glass choices that can be very expensive and very wrong for the type of shooting the individual wants to do. Keep working on this. It is quite refreshing! 😄
Yes, this kind of thing is great even though much of the exposure tutorial was review. What I really appreciated was the composition and focal length related decisions and why you selected certain photos over others for the final collection. I feel like I can always learn more about composition and lens selection, so please more of that. Thanks for the video.
Great video. Really enjoyed the educational aspect and narrowing down your story. Definitely want more educational videos in future! I'd be interested to know what computer/monitor etc...set up you use.
Excellent! I'd like to see a future video include something on preparing for a photo shoot such as this. What goes through your mind beforehand, whether you visit a site, how you select your equipment and so on. Thanks!
I think that depending on what you're doing Auto-iso would be better. For example, in sports you do not want the camera adjusting your shutter speed down.
These videos are so helpful. I have made a bunch of notes whilst I'm watching this. I'm a semi pro photographer looking to gain a few more paid gigs and your videos and wider context is so beneficial. I hope you keep making videos like this, thank you for your help. Rob H in Wales, United Kingdom.
Jeremy Parr Hi Jared I still have a lot trouble with my aperture speed and the ISO watching your youturbe this has help me to understand more about my setting and apertures and the ISO thank you so much for shearing this imfo yours truly Jeremy Parr
Another good video, but manual mode with auto-ISO is the winning combination. It is the quicker way to go. Just set a max of 800, 1600, 3200, 6400 or whatever ISO you can live with for the situation. I have done that with my Nikons and Sony cameras for a few years.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise in this video! I enjoyed this video with you talking about how your taking the pictures and editing. Keep up the good work.
Really enjoyed how you broke it down. It will help me out a lot. I have alway struggled with lighting and composition. I appreciate how you tell a story with your photos. As a side your videos got to shoot Raw !
I enjoyed seeing the process. Thank you. You didn't mention white balance, do you leave it auto? Maybe take a greycard shot? Spot pick from the RAW file in post? Yes please to the more instructional videos.
great video, very helpful, thank you for driving the lesson home with a repetition of the decision making exercise, should make it easier for me to remember later in the heat of battle. also love all the talk about where to stand and what the human stories are, that's key in learning any new skill, you have to learn how the tool works but also the different ways you can hold your body and be aware of a space while you use the tool.
please DO more videos like this !!! I love these breakdowns
I learned a lot years ago when you did a lot more teaching. I love how you break down your photo shoots and explain your editing process. You have a way to simplify exposure and everything else for that matter. It is always good to get back to the basics and find ways to improve . Yes, I would love to see more teaching. Never stop learning.
Thanks!
Please yes, more of this. I'm tired of getting on RUclips and only see gear reviews/new tech etc. I'd love to learn more about composition, etc. The more artistic and technical aspects of photography. I know some people are probably not as interested in it, but that's just my ten cents. Thank you for what you do!
Dude I prefer this over you looking at other people's photos. Love it
I love when you do these "back to basics" tutorials. Could you do a similar "back to basics" for speedlights? I'd really appreciate it and I'm sure many others would find it helpful as well
I tend to rely on Aperture Priority (and I admit it's a crutch) but vids like this make me want to just go to manual and deal with the learning curve
Seconded - please. I know it’s not usually FroKnowsPhoto style to use on or off camera flash but would be super helpful for those of us who want to play around with it or get into that
Great video. The way you not only teach but explain is very helpful to me. Thank you.
This breaks down the triangle in an easier explanation and gives real world scenarios. When I graduated to mirrorless I read Bryan Peterson's book, Understanding exposure, which helped a lot. Great job!
I love that you show how to build exposure. You simplify it perfectly. This is great for beginners like myself.
Ahhhhhh.........Thank you for such a practical approach, and demonstration of these techniques. And thank you for the complete molecular breakdown. I appreciate your brutal honesty. It's nice to see that you're as hard on yourself as you are on us when reviewing our photos...lol. Up and coming photographers are led to believe that the pros, such as yourself, NEVER get a bad shot, whether it's out of focus, soft, or even a missed moment. But you've given so much information here that gives us a solid foundation. And it's highly encouraging. As you you've stated: It's up to each and every one of us to decide what we need to see. Everyone is an artist, and perception is key. I would certainly LOVE to see more of this type of content. Many thanks!!
As an amateur photographer I definitely appreciated how you broke down the exposure adjustments. I tend to flick through shutter/aperture/iso adjustments relying on the screen preview, so seeing the math was great!
One think I really appreciate is that, despite the fact that you’re going to go with the best of the best equipment that you can use due to obviously being a professional, you understand that this can be accomplished with any gear possible.
Great video as always.
Dude has a huge personality but clearly has an impressive body of work. Sometimes straight takes don't translate to clicks and views on RUclips so it's refreshing when Jared does one of these vids.
And he's spot on about glass. If you get the best glass possible, that will work with any competent photographer with any competent camera. You can't make a cheaper lens get brighter apertures.
@@derbagger22 yes. Even cheaper camera body works with great lenses with minimum differences. If lens doesn't allow good amount of light, even expensive body can't give you bright and noise free images. The camera body should be secondary thing.
I am so grateful for you breaking the steps down and show how you could adjust the different ways to change the lighting, how much to focus in close and wider.
Having shot weddings on 5D Mk II and 5d Mk III for 13 years, then graduating to the EOS R5.... I have to say I am super thankful for my DSLR Experience and now I can actually use my gear to get what I'm thinking and wanting in my head. It's a perfect scenario.
Jared, this video was absolutely fantastic! Please PLEASE start doing more of these!
310 comments as of this date and seemingly NO ONE made note of the Men in Black reference at 0:13 ? Jared, well done sir!! WELL done! Sorry it has taken 2+ years for someone to give you credit, but... That was AWESOME!
Yes I would absolutely like to see you break down more images and discussing why you chose the lens you chose. Absolutely loved this video. Thanks Jared!
Having just done a shoot the night before with live music shooting with manual settings, I went back and watched this video. It was a helpful reinforcement of what I should have done better with my shutter speed. Thanks for making this.
I loved this because too many people talk above and it is not useful . You on the other hand spoke to me as a beginner shooting in manual. Thank you
Yes! I would like more videos like this breaking down all the process, details and explaining everything!
Do more of these please, I love watching your gigs and talking us through on how your mind works.
The best advice you've ever given me is to always bring my camera with me and take a ton of photos
This is what truly separates you and the rest!. I really enjoyed this video and the basics for a beginner like me was very helpful. Thanks again.
I enjoy these types of videos. I have been taking photos for close to 50 years and can still learn a few things. Thank you for making all the different videos that you d!
I love these type of educational videos. I like how you explain the thought that went into taking the photos you did as well as explaining the basic of exposure. I look forward to more videos like these. Thank you Jared for making this video and all the other ones you do as well.
Yes, great to see your workflow process and highlighting of the fundamentals. Thank you.
Really enjoyed this Fro!!!! I’m a semi professional/,hobbyists for going on 50 years now and I really like to watch educational videos even to this day. Their fun and helps knock the rust off. Thanks!!!!!
This was extremely helpful. I loved how you break down each photo when it came to setting the scene, talking over settings, reviewing the math of it and what you could have done differently if you wanted something different. I would be a frequent watcher if you continued to make these videos. Great work Jared, thank you for the lessons
Another top video, well explained
Thank you, I enjoyed how you used your authentic photos to explain how you "expose" for light in photos. I have been a "lazy" photographer. Since I take photos for fun, and occasionally display the ones I got "lucky" on in my home, I have not been intentional. Therefore I waste a lot of shots or come away with no keepers. Keep on doing what you're doing!
Thanks Jared, please keep on creating content like this, it's very helpful to watch your creative perspective, how you frame the scenes, your comments why you did so and what you had focused on. Also the changes you made in Lightroom to create a finished picture.
You are a great teacher and you have been so helpful to me. I am learning so much. I just finished your video on the Nikon 5600 and now I have it set up correctly. Yes please do more teaching videos, lot and lots more please. Thank you for all your time and help
Appreciate videos like this. I’m very comfortable getting in the “ballpark” for my settings but the fine tuning and composition of “story telling” are the parts I really would like to hear more about
Yes, this is something I would love to learn more about. I love how you made a story from the pictures and showed your thought process and eliminations.
Super helpful. As I hear you talk and explain exposure I hear clicking in my head. When I took up photography a year ago I wished I would’ve found your site sooner. Very simple but very effective teaching. Get up the good work and great channel content.
Really loved this and how you break everything down from composition to settings! Keep them coming.
Loved this video Jared! Yes, come up with more of it once in a while.
For someone looking to go from taking pictures to taking photographs this contained a great explanation of the triangle and composition. More of these would be great.
This was really great teaching. Love how you break down the exposure triangle. Looking forward to more of this.
Between you and the book understanding exposure I’ve learned so much! I have a long way to go but I’m excited to figure this out and somehow make it a profession! Thank you!
Definitely do more videos like this! I love how you broke down exposure in the simplest of terms. I also enjoyed the methodology you use in selecting good photos. I’m looking forward to the next video!
Brilliant video. I learned loads from your video guides a few years back when I wanted to get out of auto and I love this style of education. What I love about this video is the context of the teachable moments within a real world situation / assignment. If you could pair this with the pre - eg the thought process as you take the shots - that would be amazing but even if not this type of video is super helpful and interesting!
I’ve watched this video, about 3 times. Once when I started photography, and now, about 2 years later. It’s wild how much sense this all makes now. 😂
This is right on time for me - no matter how often I take pics I keep forgetting all this! Probably why I cannot get out of auto iso! !! Thank you.
I always enjoy watching your videos on camera gear but this video was fantastic and very educational. When you covered compensation for different stops, it was very easy to understand how you broke it down. But the best part of the video was how you talked about creating a story and covering different angles to establish different scenes. That and watching you use different f stops to create the different depths of field in real life situations such as using a certain f stop to get several rows of people without the whole audience! I learned a lot. 10 out of 10 recommend 💯💯💯
I like these types of tutorials where you explain your thinking and ideas. Also, I like that you mentioned you took ~240 photos to get the final set. That helps many beginners and amateurs to realize that even the best take a lot of photos to get the keepers. Also, the emphasis on getting the exposure close enough and selecting the best mode for the situation, in this case full manual. The ISO settings are higher than some would suggest but you are saying get the best balance for exposure and get the shot even if there is a little noise or little less color.
Love photoshoot videos! That is how I learned and still enjoy watching them so I can create a better photo story
"I look for four things: wides, mediums, close-ups, and details." That line alone made the video for me!
It's nice to see your passion for teaching.
As a beginners guide, I would have spent 30 sec on Metering modes, as spot, Center, or Multi metering gives different results/histograms.
That might alter all settings depending on the situation.
For auto, the point is to shoot manual
Love this. Please do more of this type. Thank you!
Great video wow. I great to see that you explained so well and detailed. Also like to see that if I dont have the tool, (lens) that I needed, I can play with my camera tools and make it happen. So the answer to your question? YES PLEASE KEEP VIDEOS LIKE THIS BECAUSE THEY HELP SO MUCH. But of course I understand how busy you are creating new material and keeping us up to date with new equipment as well. THANK YOU
I was certainly missing these tutorial videos. Thank you very much to restarting these.
I enjoyed your work with Bernie and this teaching moment to reminds me of the Nikon school of photography that I did in 1983 It was 40,000 slides pesented as Good Better and Best composition of the same image. Thank you for stepping into your teaching mode. even at 75 I am not finished learning.
I really dig this! It's absolute basics but what we forget the easiest is the basics and then for the new shooters you can't over emphasize this enough!
I agree Jared, the one where he is finishing the letter T in his last name looks amazing.
If I can get shots like that, I’m beyond happy.
You make great videos. Perfect for “Atari guys”. I’m 50 and this can can get complicated quickly. Thanks for the great explications. BTW the Afro looked better than the jeri curls.
I Love these type of video's....this is how the penny dropped for me for understanding exposure...watching you break it down on paper...can't thank you enough, now I only shoot raw.
It was interesting and I appreciated it. You were good at identifying the positive views of the photos, yet you rarely mentioned their negative aspects. Even good photos, especially when taking actual events have distractions and negative elements. Several of your best photos had heads, people's bodies, objects or colors that distracted the view from the main story elements.
Great job dude! It is hard to teach/learn manual shooting without the structure and having a series of shots to take that actually require some changes. I really like the way you explained why you did what you did. I have seen many many videos on the subject of manual shooting and this one #1! I think beginners should start in manual mode and just not look back. Three things to learn for basic understanding, aperture ( f stop), shutter speed, and ISO all under control of the photographer. Necessary knowledge and practice before making glass choices that can be very expensive and very wrong for the type of shooting the individual wants to do. Keep working on this. It is quite refreshing! 😄
Luv this format, Thank you for taking the time to do this, I learned a lot from this video.
I very much appreciate this break down. Thanks for being awesome Jared!
Keep breaking down your photoshoots, it is very humbling and enlightening in how we can better our craft. As always good stuff
Reminds me of your older videos. I'll always enjoy these videos.
Oh my gosh. I'm a newbie and this helped so much. For some reason, the info. finally clicked. Thanks!
I didn’t always agree with your choices, but I enjoyed hearing your though processes.
Yes, this kind of thing is great even though much of the exposure tutorial was review. What I really appreciated was the composition and focal length related decisions and why you selected certain photos over others for the final collection. I feel like I can always learn more about composition and lens selection, so please more of that. Thanks for the video.
Equipment reviews are great. This type of teaching is priceless. You honestly don’t get this in local photo classes
Great video. Really enjoyed the educational aspect and narrowing down your story. Definitely want more educational videos in future! I'd be interested to know what computer/monitor etc...set up you use.
The little things you learn from this type of video is great!
I really enjoyed the way you broke down your photo shoot. It really helped me to learn more! Thank you!
I like these type of videos. I learned so much from your Beddia II video from composure, lighting, timing, and patience.
Love this. I’m coming back to my arts and really need the refresher. I am also very nerdish and stoned and this helped me a lot.
Hi Jared, I really enjoyed the photo story you made in this video.
Please do more videos like this.
Greetings from IRELAND :)
Excellent! I'd like to see a future video include something on preparing for a photo shoot such as this. What goes through your mind beforehand, whether you visit a site, how you select your equipment and so on. Thanks!
Thank you! Keep them coming. The main tip I got from this is, if the light is changing, it is better to switch to A priority. Thank you!
I think that depending on what you're doing Auto-iso would be better. For example, in sports you do not want the camera adjusting your shutter speed down.
@@EBLovesMusicOh, I see, great advise man, I think it actually makes more sense, thank so much!
Here here, more of these please. I look forward purchasing your presets one day. Keep it up Mr 👌🏾
Jared’s been doing this for his whole youtube career !
I would enjoying seeing more of your story-telling breakdown videos. This was a great peak at what I hope will be a few more to come. Take care!
Love the video, detailed explanation with what was the idea behind the shot and self-critique!
Thank you, Jared.
Waiting for the next photoshoot, lots of information in 40 minutes. Watching from Cuba. Thanks a lot.
These videos are so helpful. I have made a bunch of notes whilst I'm watching this. I'm a semi pro photographer looking to gain a few more paid gigs and your videos and wider context is so beneficial. I hope you keep making videos like this, thank you for your help. Rob H in Wales, United Kingdom.
Yes please. Great way to understand and improve my skills. Feels like you are my mentor.
I'm just getting into photography and this was very helpful. Thanks for sharing!
I would love to see more break downs of your shoots and going through the images. Thanks for this!
Great video man, I love learning from you this way
Always an easy way for people to learn basics of photography. 👍📷
More of these videos? Yes please
Jeremy Parr Hi Jared I still have a lot trouble with my aperture speed and the ISO watching your youturbe this has help me to understand more about my setting and apertures and the ISO thank you so much for shearing this imfo yours truly Jeremy Parr
I do enjoy learning from you, you're very knowledgeable. I would love to see more instructional videos from you!
GREAT video. Really helpful and interesting to see how you make your editorial and directorial decisions. Would love to see more of these.
As always, interesting, pedagogical, funny, and a powerful diction that suits me perfectly to perfect myself in lurning English.
Another good video, but manual mode with auto-ISO is the winning combination. It is the quicker way to go. Just set a max of 800, 1600, 3200, 6400 or whatever ISO you can live with for the situation. I have done that with my Nikons and Sony cameras for a few years.
Awesome tutorial, loved the process from start to finish 👏👏👏
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise in this video! I enjoyed this video with you talking about how your taking the pictures and editing. Keep up the good work.
Really enjoyed how you broke it down. It will help me out a lot. I have alway struggled with lighting and composition. I appreciate how you tell a story with your photos. As a side your videos got to shoot Raw !
I really enjoy these kind of videos! Thank you!
Love that these videos are back again!!!!!
I enjoyed that. Wouldn’t mind seeing you tackle landscapes and culling
great breakdown; learned today how a stop of light relates mathematically to ISO\Shutter which clicks for me like no other explanation.
I enjoyed seeing the process. Thank you. You didn't mention white balance, do you leave it auto? Maybe take a greycard shot? Spot pick from the RAW file in post? Yes please to the more instructional videos.
great video, very helpful, thank you for driving the lesson home with a repetition of the decision making exercise, should make it easier for me to remember later in the heat of battle. also love all the talk about where to stand and what the human stories are, that's key in learning any new skill, you have to learn how the tool works but also the different ways you can hold your body and be aware of a space while you use the tool.