Camera club – how to photograph a river – photography tutorials
Subscribe to the Guardian HERE: http://bitly.com/UvkFpD
Guardian photographer Graham Turner wades into the chilly waters of the River Roding in Essex for October’s camera club assignment
Original source
17 responses to “Camera club – how to photograph a river – photography tutorials”
Those are great ideas. Will surely try out similar shots!
Great fun and fully agree about getting into the river. I shoot 35mm and am always up to my neck. Great. It's actually just like being a kid again. More people should shake them shackles off.
wow, i came accross this https://plus.google.com/117154218957469282190/posts/6fgwHeaZ44d check it out for more tutorials
Hilarious gahaga!
i thought the old man was great! (video edited of old man walking away talking like he's mad at something, ha ha ha ha ha ha ha 🙂
Or to prove to people who like to think that they're pros, you don't need a great camera. Lighting and composition – much easier said than done!
Agreed, this guy even got into the river!
I'd put a polarizer filter on the lense when photographing water.
there is every thing wrong with a kit lens strap it to a D60 very unpro and i ment to listen to this shit??? I running and a Canon eos 7D The cheapest lens i own is a $150 50mm prime lens for portrait photography!
Too bad The Guardian thinks this guy is good enough to pay him to take photo's, cause I'm sure you YouTube nobody's are way better…..*yawn*
great catches!! really nice!
I was really expecting much more. The photos are simple for all the effort he took. Like if you agree…
boring, but the shoot was good at 1:38
@GadgetAddicted Clearly he's employed by the guardian, so clearly he knows his shit.
And since you dont agree with his methods.. clearly you dont know your shit.
Very nice video, I've learned from it!
@GadgetAddicted
Seriously?
Maybe there is more than one way to hold a camera, and maybe "properly" isn't a pre-condition of any good photo…
And maybe it's good that we're being shown how to photograph without spending £2,500 on pro-standard cameras and lenses.
I reckon you'd be a pretty shit photographer for this feature…
For a professional, he doesn't even know how to hold the camera properly…and he's using a kit 18-55 lens?!? Seriously? Let me know if you folks need a new photographer..