Thanks so much for restocking vol. 1 (2018). Having only found your channel relatively recently, I feared I'd missed out, but gladly managed to order all 3 books. Cheers!
Hey I noticed you’re not biking as much - apart from today! - in your videos. I’m wondering whether the drop bar gravel bike is not as good for adventure photography as your mountain bike? How about doing a photography x bicycle type video to discuss bicycle types (eg gravel vs mountain bike) from an outdoor photography perspective? Is the less upright body position with a large camera backpack problematic on a drop bar bike? What about stability? Can you explore as well as on your mountain bike? Have you ever considered something like a Salsa Blackborow, for example? Also re spiders in Australia, I once had a 12cm huntsman spider crawl across my chest in the middle of a hot summer’s night - yes it did wake me up - yes I can relate to being bothered by a spider in your home and you’re definitely entitled to be feeling a bit traumatised the next day
Hi James. I'm kind of new to your channel. It's great and your videos are both entertaining and informative. I'm also a new photographer/videographer. QUESTION: Ignoring the point you were making in the video, would a gradient filter have saved that first shot of the house in the hills?
Love your content AF, it isn’t dry, boring, lecturing, neither pompous but an-assumingly educative. A whole shitload of knowledge and entertainment … Thanks man!
8:42 for future reference, best to tap potentially electric fences with the back of your hand. If it was electric, it would have caused your muscles to seize, and you would have actually ended up grabbing on to it
Starting at the max zoom and working out could be such a good skill to learn how to frame a shot for new photographers like myself. Amazing video as always. Thank you very much
Small bit of advice when testing a suspected electric fence (13:50) use the back of your hand. Also, I ordered all three of your books after last weeks video, can't wait for them to arrive.
@@dalerobinson8456 a grass straw is a good way to check a fence, it wont shock you, but if it is electric, you will feel a small tingle in your fingers.
Love this channel, and love the Saturday inspiration every week. Some solid advice, brilliant humour and great photographs. Keep it up and enjoy the holiday.
Thanks for the advice! I only shoot primes so I can’t zoom but you really made me think about starting from what I want to capture rather than what I don’t want to lose.
Right up until last weekend, it's been unusually warm (20-25C) here in the middle of Canada and I've been loving it because I've been able to get out and stay out for hours to photograph the fall colours. Now, it's a more normal 5C and windy and dreary. Ugh.
Watching your videos makes me feel like i can take the shots with the same result yet i fail everytime. Following you made me find out my style and probably my mentor I THINK. 🤪 which is you.
Colours have peaked in Nova Scotia. Have visited the province many times but never managed an autumn trip util this year. Also, the first trip in over 22 months! A truly amazing year for fall colour. Never seen such vibrant reads. Nova Scotia/Cape Breton....a must trip for fall colour.
James, You are on to something here. Been using this technique the past few times out and have come home with some great photos. Thanks. Always enjoy your videos.
The colors are lovely (the coat and the bottle) and I've never thought to try zooming out intentionally as you've demonstrated. So, unless I feel the need to emulate your color choices I can try this technique at no cost! Thanks for the tip!!!
That's a really interesting tip James, and one that I must admit I'd not thought of. I'm going to give that a go! ta very much. It's interesting that you're using pathways to illustrate your point too, because pathways are one of my favourite things to take photos of in the first place.
The colours are certainly changing for you. Here in Melbourne Australia, we have just been released from a long lockdown and am so enjoying revisiting my favourite locations. Not too many spiders here either 😉
@@AlexMcDougallPhotography idk what you’re referring to as the Covid island but here in Idaho we had pretty much no lock down and we did just fine. Especially small businesses, they didn’t get fucked into oblivion by policy here.
I love the reminder that there is always something interesting in our own backyard. The western face of the Rocky mountains that dominate my landscape, that while beautiful, I feel like I over-photograph, are always the most popular photos to my friends in the UK.
Good simple tip James...will have to give it a try. Love your humor. Makes me nervous when you get so close the edge...have to look away. Have a fabulous holiday with Emily and Noah and safe travels.
As a crappy beginner photographer I find myself cropping the majority of my photos when I get them home because it increases the impact. That was a great tip which I will use next time i go out. Maybe I can get it right in camera, next time.
Totally agree. Just shot some sports photography (discgolf) this weekend. Did not have the courage to get closer to the players at first but by the end of the weekend was just sitting next to them while they were throwing. 😀 completly different perspective and cool photos that way.
Can't wait to see the book when it's ready! Love this channel so much. Literally stop everything when I see a notification of a new video. In this case I'm halfway through regrouting my bathroom floor. I should probably get back to that. (Once I've grown a new pair of knees.)
was cool that you showed the before and after edit, versions. the car/caravan... wellll eery, ducky! very american film scene! loved the river scene, like a thomas cole painting even with all the detail and really showed the quality of your camera/lens. may help to think of spider as just a mummy out on a foraging mission, for her family... no?.. !! anyway, happy holiday! 🙌🏼
Great video and an excellent tip, James! By the way, I was told by an electrical engineer friend to use the back of my hand when checking for something that might have a charge. It could prevent a situation where you involuntarily grip the charged wire. I saw that someone else mentioned this in a comment as well, but I thought it would be worth reiterating. Hope you have a great holiday and the autumn colors are still waiting for you when you get back!
Great points you made in this video! It's important to know what is your subject in the image. Giving it just enough context and not overcomlicating it with too much stuff is quite hard. In my opinion one of the key skills in photography is to know what to include in the photo.
This is an excellent video and everything so well explained and demonstrated making it easy to. understand. I am an amateur photographer and an electronic engineer by profession. I am prompted to comment about how to safely check if wires are electrified. Touching them with hands up or down is not a sure and safe method. If you are wearing shoes that are well insulated,you will not get a shock even if the wires are electrified. But whenever any part of your body comes in contact with the wire and the ground both, you can get a serious shock. The only safe and easy solution is to keep a small electric tester/screwdriver in your bag if you are going to be in such a situation.
Great video James! Such a good point about not being close enough to your composition. I have just completed my mountain landscape photography vlog and I was kicking myself half way up the mountain wishing I had brought my 70/200mm with me but I just couldnt justify the weight over a 5 hour hike so I could relate to that a lot. Great images thrughout this video. Great explanation too. Thanks for sharing James. I look forward to the next video. Keep up the great work!
Another great video James! Never thought of zooming out and working my way backwards probably a lot easier for me too as I like having compressed shots to show scale of things more and overall just find the compositions a lot cleaner and easier on the eyes
Hi James, another great video. Just a tip from an electrician worker, never touch electric wire with fingers down, do the same thing but touch with fingers up or you will grab the wire and your muscles are hard to release. Cheers
I would highly recommend you the Sony 24-105 f4. I use it on my A7rii and it covers 95% of the usual landscape focal lengths. I basicly leave my 12-24 f4 at home 90% of the time.
I recall I had just bought a wide angle lens and gone to Italy, where I promptly started at the wide end over and over and over again, only to come home with a bunch of mediocre shots. About a week after coming home, I stumbled across your video talking about wide angle lenses, and how you keep yours at the wide end, and zoom out until the scene looks right. That one bit of knowledge would've made for so many more useable shots!
Beautiful work. I'm only shooting wildlife, but contemplating taking two bodies and purchasing wide angle lens, so that I can shoot scenery. My question: At (for example) 28mm, and shooting a scene (like @ 6:00 of this video), what aperture setting would you use and approximately where would you chose to be the focus point in the scene? It appears that most of the scene is relatively in focus.
I really enjoyed this one James. You voiced a lot of the thoughts I have about finding things on the doorstep. The quality of your post production images as shown on the video gave me a renewed enthusiasm for not passing by the opportunity to take those ‘get them in the bank’ photos today for the hope of better conditions tomorrow as well. I think I can benefit from the time in Lightroom working an effective composition into a better end result that way. Off topic.. but what footwear were you in.. I like the look of those.. maybe it was just the laces. Have a great break with the family. Looking forward to your next upload.
Worth a try. Thanks for the tip! FYI, if there are insulators on the fence post, you should just assume the wire is electrified, but a wooden post may lack insulators and still have hot wires.
Love your video James. A really awesome tip - I can't believe I haven't thought of that myself! Your videos always inspire me - and I now have a deep desire to visit Wales - it looks absolutely gorgeous! Would love a video or two about some of your idols - the photographers that have inspired you! If one of them happens to be Todd Hido then that would be an extra bonus! :D
Thank you James, really enjoyed that little jornt! Of course, it may have been a long jornt - we just don't know. I appreciate yourpoints about framing subjects, I do tend to go too wide on the bases I can crop in post - however losing some definision! I do like to use a zoom but someone made the point; using a 25mm (50 equivalent in full) is a good exercise - just move yourself. Quite a few of your shot are close to this focal length by the way, but always a danger one might step of a cliff! Regards, Martyn
When you said you'd start at a longer focal length... I was thinking like 105mm or something. I might be a bit influenced by the fact that my favourite lens is a 135mm prime... and I use it for pretty much everything from landscape to wildlife (ok, more tame life but still...) and macroish stuff.
I think rather then zooming in or out a better approach is to choose your focal length beforehand and adjust afterwards, that way you make a conscious choice of what FOV to use and you better learn what different focal lengts look like and are good for
Lovely pictures, what I wouldn't give for a photo hike with you. Also my favourite color is blue so I highly approve of that water bottle :P. With shooting wide my mindset is how much I can fit in and what elements are most important to the story ... Everything else can go (out of the frame). I've been having so much fun (except for the time I have to wait for the stitching to finish on my crappy laptop) going back to doing panoramas (I blame that on Olympus'es Hand Held High Resolution feature).
you woould of loved it the other night mate i was taking an astro shot at a waterfall in Karinjin and a redback was crawling next to me about 5 foot away and then a baby snake about 2 foot long started coming for me ! i was shitting myself ! but still got the shot lol
Thanks so much for the support with the book everyone! All of them are in stock currently still :)
www.jamespopsys.com/store?category=Books
Thanks so much for restocking vol. 1 (2018). Having only found your channel relatively recently, I feared I'd missed out, but gladly managed to order all 3 books.
Cheers!
Hey I noticed you’re not biking as much - apart from today! - in your videos. I’m wondering whether the drop bar gravel bike is not as good for adventure photography as your mountain bike? How about doing a photography x bicycle type video to discuss bicycle types (eg gravel vs mountain bike) from an outdoor photography perspective? Is the less upright body position with a large camera backpack problematic on a drop bar bike? What about stability? Can you explore as well as on your mountain bike? Have you ever considered something like a Salsa Blackborow, for example?
Also re spiders in Australia, I once had a 12cm huntsman spider crawl across my chest in the middle of a hot summer’s night - yes it did wake me up - yes I can relate to being bothered by a spider in your home and you’re definitely entitled to be feeling a bit traumatised the next day
Would be interested to know if you have had to amend your presets at all since moving to the Sony system
Hi James. I'm kind of new to your channel. It's great and your videos are both entertaining and informative. I'm also a new photographer/videographer. QUESTION: Ignoring the point you were making in the video, would a gradient filter have saved that first shot of the house in the hills?
Being a post-processing fanatic, I really like how you show the shots before and after processing.
Agreed! This is really appreciated. Also, your personality.
Love your content AF, it isn’t dry, boring, lecturing, neither pompous but an-assumingly educative. A whole shitload of knowledge and entertainment … Thanks man!
8:42 for future reference, best to tap potentially electric fences with the back of your hand. If it was electric, it would have caused your muscles to seize, and you would have actually ended up grabbing on to it
With DC current
This is a fun fact I tell people whenever electric fences are brought up lol
I love when you show what your camera actually see. Very helpfull
Enjoy your hols, when you're away I'll be running around shaking all the trees.
Starting at the max zoom and working out could be such a good skill to learn how to frame a shot for new photographers like myself. Amazing video as always. Thank you very much
Small bit of advice when testing a suspected electric fence (13:50) use the back of your hand. Also, I ordered all three of your books after last weeks video, can't wait for them to arrive.
\i learnt that trick from of all things, a "Tomorrow People" book.
or a blade of grass?
@@ruthwilson9449 A blade of grass is non-conductive, won't do anything when touched to electric fence.
@@dalerobinson8456 a grass straw is a good way to check a fence, it wont shock you, but if it is electric, you will feel a small tingle in your fingers.
There is no 13:50
Love this channel, and love the Saturday inspiration every week. Some solid advice, brilliant humour and great photographs. Keep it up and enjoy the holiday.
Well said and so true!
Thanks for the advice! I only shoot primes so I can’t zoom but you really made me think about starting from what I want to capture rather than what I don’t want to lose.
Dude, your consistency is underrated as hell.
Photographing windy roads with the GM 135 works out real well
Like you I live in the centre of Ireland and am surrounded by amazing landscapes. Hadn't really appreciated it until foreign travel got so tough!
Zooming out and not in is one of the best simple tips I have heard I think, thanks James 🙏
Right up until last weekend, it's been unusually warm (20-25C) here in the middle of Canada and I've been loving it because I've been able to get out and stay out for hours to photograph the fall colours. Now, it's a more normal 5C and windy and dreary. Ugh.
Just got back from a fall trip to Cape Breton and mainland Nova Scotia. Never seen such vibrant reds in my life. It was truly astounding.
Always enjoy. After watching you for a while now I have found myself doing more hand held and actually enjoying it.
Watching your videos makes me feel like i can take the shots with the same result yet i fail everytime. Following you made me find out my style and probably my mentor I THINK. 🤪 which is you.
Thanks mate, love your work. Don't even mind the water-bottle
I love your photography AND your humor! 😉
"why are you laughing?"...darn near spilled my tea! Another good video, James...great tip!
Have fun on the holiday!
Thanks for the remark about Location in the world! 👍🏻
Woah! Looking forward to Sats afternoons, love watching your vids. Keep them coming.
Fantastic tip, so simple. Thank you!
Hello James. Have a lovely weekend.
i liked the car pic @8:37 . shows more of a mood and vibe
Thank you for sharing your knowledge, experience, and humor with us, James. Love your content.
Colours have peaked in Nova Scotia. Have visited the province many times but never managed an autumn trip util this year. Also, the first trip in over 22 months! A truly amazing year for fall colour. Never seen such vibrant reads. Nova Scotia/Cape Breton....a must trip for fall colour.
Love your videos and your humor :P
James, You are on to something here. Been using this technique the past few times out and have come home with some great photos. Thanks. Always enjoy your videos.
Great shots
The colors are lovely (the coat and the bottle) and I've never thought to try zooming out intentionally as you've demonstrated. So, unless I feel the need to emulate your color choices I can try this technique at no cost! Thanks for the tip!!!
Good advice, James. I like that idea of starting out most zoomed in and pulling back until the most impactful frame is found.
Enjoy ur holiday! Thanks for putting the raw and then the edited! I love seeing the before and after
Thanks, James. Really like this tip. Simple but helpful.
Nice educational video. One topic, lots of photo examples, good job. Wow an old Dodge in Wales.
That's a really interesting tip James, and one that I must admit I'd not thought of. I'm going to give that a go! ta very much. It's interesting that you're using pathways to illustrate your point too, because pathways are one of my favourite things to take photos of in the first place.
The colours are certainly changing for you. Here in Melbourne Australia, we have just been released from a long lockdown and am so enjoying revisiting my favourite locations. Not too many spiders here either 😉
Watching the video from Melbourne Australia as well, right after carefully relocating a few spiders of the day on the wall to the outside.
Good to hear Australia is starting to let its citizens have lives again. You guys have had it bad with the lockdown garbage.
@@Mike_to_the_k It's worked for them though hasn't it? Unlike us on the covid island.
@@AlexMcDougallPhotography idk what you’re referring to as the Covid island but here in Idaho we had pretty much no lock down and we did just fine. Especially small businesses, they didn’t get fucked into oblivion by policy here.
@@Mike_to_the_k That would be the UK.
The image of a cottage with blue windows and door at 1:32 was very picturesque
I love the reminder that there is always something interesting in our own backyard. The western face of the Rocky mountains that dominate my landscape, that while beautiful, I feel like I over-photograph, are always the most popular photos to my friends in the UK.
Good simple tip James...will have to give it a try. Love your humor. Makes me nervous when you get so close the edge...have to look away. Have a fabulous holiday with Emily and Noah and safe travels.
stumbled across your page on this video, very impressed. got yourself another follower!
Drone flying power stance! Another great one James. So beautiful there!
As a crappy beginner photographer I find myself cropping the majority of my photos when I get them home because it increases the impact. That was a great tip which I will use next time i go out. Maybe I can get it right in camera, next time.
Exactly Jeff! That’s the same (wrong) begginers mistake I keep repeating.
👌👍🔝📸
I actually love the image at 10:16 that you said you didn't like
Thank you for this awesome tip!
Great video and photographs, you make me laugh more and more with every video you make.
Blue 🔵 orange 🧡 perfect combination. Probably the best example of color theory.
Lovely shots James, the colours are very nice indeed 👌 Hope you get another go at it.
Our spiders in Australia have been known to drag away small adults in the night.
Don’t forget the drop bears.
Stay safe James. 🇦🇺🤣
Great video. Love the content. Especially the pictures
Totally agree. Just shot some sports photography (discgolf) this weekend. Did not have the courage to get closer to the players at first but by the end of the weekend was just sitting next to them while they were throwing. 😀 completly different perspective and cool photos that way.
Can't wait to see the book when it's ready! Love this channel so much. Literally stop everything when I see a notification of a new video. In this case I'm halfway through regrouting my bathroom floor. I should probably get back to that. (Once I've grown a new pair of knees.)
was cool that you showed the before and after edit, versions. the car/caravan... wellll eery, ducky! very american film scene! loved the river scene, like a thomas cole painting even with all the detail and really showed the quality of your camera/lens. may help to think of spider as just a mummy out on a foraging mission, for her family... no?.. !! anyway, happy holiday! 🙌🏼
Great advice, I totally love your drone shots! Have a nice vacation!!!
Moonpie
I love seeing someone showing the beauty of Wales actually looks like
Great video and an excellent tip, James! By the way, I was told by an electrical engineer friend to use the back of my hand when checking for something that might have a charge. It could prevent a situation where you involuntarily grip the charged wire. I saw that someone else mentioned this in a comment as well, but I thought it would be worth reiterating. Hope you have a great holiday and the autumn colors are still waiting for you when you get back!
Great points you made in this video! It's important to know what is your subject in the image. Giving it just enough context and not overcomlicating it with too much stuff is quite hard. In my opinion one of the key skills in photography is to know what to include in the photo.
Thank you so much for the lovely video and lessons!
You do have a particular nice piece of nature closeby James.
Great tip! Something I’ve never thought about but do all the time. Zoom into a scene vs zooming out of a scene.
This is an excellent video and everything so well explained and demonstrated making it easy to. understand. I am an amateur photographer and an electronic engineer by profession. I am prompted to comment about how to safely check if wires are electrified. Touching them with hands up or down is not a sure and safe method. If you are wearing shoes that are well insulated,you will not get a shock even if the wires are electrified. But whenever any part of your body comes in contact with the wire and the ground both, you can get a serious shock. The only safe and easy solution is to keep a small electric tester/screwdriver in your bag if you are going to be in such a situation.
I agree 😊
Autumn colors are here in Oregon, unfortunately we are expecting wind tomorrow so buh bye leaves. Loved the railroad photo. -Elaine
Mate you’re incredible well glad I watched this video
Great video James! Such a good point about not being close enough to your composition. I have just completed my mountain landscape photography vlog and I was kicking myself half way up the mountain wishing I had brought my 70/200mm with me but I just couldnt justify the weight over a 5 hour hike so I could relate to that a lot. Great images thrughout this video. Great explanation too. Thanks for sharing James. I look forward to the next video. Keep up the great work!
Great images James! Thanks for sharing your prospective.
I love your advices James. Continue creating, as we say here in the Philippines, "Padayon".
re "not really my cup of tea......" ........Thats THEEEE image in your video that does it for me !
beautiful
Great video! Very helpful content and tips. I just got a 14-30 for my Z6ii. I definitely need practice with this lens.
Another great video James! Never thought of zooming out and working my way backwards probably a lot easier for me too as I like having compressed shots to show scale of things more and overall just find the compositions a lot cleaner and easier on the eyes
Hi James, another great video. Just a tip from an electrician worker, never touch electric wire with fingers down, do the same thing but touch with fingers up or you will grab the wire and your muscles are hard to release. Cheers
I would highly recommend you the Sony 24-105 f4. I use it on my A7rii and it covers 95% of the usual landscape focal lengths.
I basicly leave my 12-24 f4 at home 90% of the time.
Great vid, this year is the first year I've properly planned to go somewhere at peak autumn colour. Heading to the Brecon area on Tuesday!
I recall I had just bought a wide angle lens and gone to Italy, where I promptly started at the wide end over and over and over again, only to come home with a bunch of mediocre shots. About a week after coming home, I stumbled across your video talking about wide angle lenses, and how you keep yours at the wide end, and zoom out until the scene looks right. That one bit of knowledge would've made for so many more useable shots!
Great tip, thanks.
Beautiful work. I'm only shooting wildlife, but contemplating taking two bodies and purchasing wide angle lens, so that I can shoot scenery. My question: At (for example) 28mm, and shooting a scene (like @ 6:00 of this video), what aperture setting would you use and approximately where would you chose to be the focus point in the scene? It appears that most of the scene is relatively in focus.
that scene could be like f7.1 to f8, the focus point is not very close to the camera so a shallow aperture will still get everything in focus.
Great video James! This tip will revolutionize my approach to capturing images. Cheers, Keith
Some nice images there James.
Never thought of zooming out but I probably do it all the time, without being aware 😊👌
I always get a couple of laughs watching your videos. Good advise about zooming out.
I really enjoyed this one James. You voiced a lot of the thoughts I have about finding things on the doorstep. The quality of your post production images as shown on the video gave me a renewed enthusiasm for not passing by the opportunity to take those ‘get them in the bank’ photos today for the hope of better conditions tomorrow as well. I think I can benefit from the time in Lightroom working an effective composition into a better end result that way.
Off topic.. but what footwear were you in.. I like the look of those.. maybe it was just the laces. Have a great break with the family. Looking forward to your next upload.
Great advice as usual James. Enjoy your holiday mate 👍
The One at Mark "6:18" is amazing for "early fall colours" 🤙📷
I really like these images- some of your best!
Great tip that I never heard of! Will def try it out albeit with my prime lenses… got no zooms haha.
Worth a try. Thanks for the tip!
FYI, if there are insulators on the fence post, you should just assume the wire is electrified, but a wooden post may lack insulators and still have hot wires.
All good advices James! except the wire testing one lol.
another great video !!!!!
Love your video James. A really awesome tip - I can't believe I haven't thought of that myself! Your videos always inspire me - and I now have a deep desire to visit Wales - it looks absolutely gorgeous!
Would love a video or two about some of your idols - the photographers that have inspired you! If one of them happens to be Todd Hido then that would be an extra bonus! :D
Oh my that sketchy ladder! You be careful out there is the forest James ....lol
Thank you 👍📷😎
Thank you James, really enjoyed that little jornt! Of course, it may have been a long jornt - we just don't know. I appreciate yourpoints about framing subjects, I do tend to go too wide on the bases I can crop in post - however losing some definision! I do like to use a zoom but someone made the point; using a 25mm (50 equivalent in full) is a good exercise - just move yourself. Quite a few of your shot are close to this focal length by the way, but always a danger one might step of a cliff! Regards, Martyn
When you said you'd start at a longer focal length... I was thinking like 105mm or something. I might be a bit influenced by the fact that my favourite lens is a 135mm prime... and I use it for pretty much everything from landscape to wildlife (ok, more tame life but still...) and macroish stuff.
I think rather then zooming in or out a better approach is to choose your focal length beforehand and adjust afterwards, that way you make a conscious choice of what FOV to use and you better learn what different focal lengts look like and are good for
Wow! I did not thinner You have and tree in England…😎
Great video mate
As a macro photographer i totally agree with "getting closer to te subject". 😉
Lovely pictures, what I wouldn't give for a photo hike with you. Also my favourite color is blue so I highly approve of that water bottle :P. With shooting wide my mindset is how much I can fit in and what elements are most important to the story ... Everything else can go (out of the frame). I've been having so much fun (except for the time I have to wait for the stitching to finish on my crappy laptop) going back to doing panoramas (I blame that on Olympus'es Hand Held High Resolution feature).
you woould of loved it the other night mate i was taking an astro shot at a waterfall in Karinjin and a redback was crawling next to me about 5 foot away and then a baby snake about 2 foot long started coming for me ! i was shitting myself ! but still got the shot lol
I like the pre and post edit views