How to Identify and Test Fake Memory Cards

SanDisk Extreme Pro SD Card

While many of us in the photography world spend time talking about the necessity of dual memory card slots and their importance on modern digital cameras, few seem to truly understand bigger problems related to storage media. One of the biggest issues that the photography community faces today is fake memory cards that show up in many online stores, including the most popular ones such as Amazon. Some of these fake memory cards have no-name brands, but most of them look legit under big brand names such as SanDisk and Lexar. The problem with fake memory cards is that they either completely misrepresent their true capabilities, or contain much less storage than advertised, which can result in storage failures with unrecoverable data. Understanding which memory cards are real vs fake is extremely important, which is why we decided to write this article.

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6 Tips for photographing real memories of your family

Last Christmas I was searching through old photos of my mom and I. I wanted to restore and frame them to give to her as a gift.

And boy did I find some real gems! There were pictures of her in college. Photos of me as a chubby baby roaming through the house. Laughs and smiles and memories.

I could have sat there for hours reminiscing. As my mom looked through those photos, I wanted to soak-up every word as she recounted the stories behind the pictures.

One of my favorites is a shot of my mom and I when I was about a year old. She’s laying down trying to get me to take a nap. And in true 1-year-old fashion, it is clear I am not interested in sleep at all. I am crawling over her and waving to my dad behind the camera.

What I love the most about this particular photo is the way that she is looking at me. I am sure she would have preferred me to be sleeping, but there is still love in her eyes. And she at least had enough of a sense of humor to know that the camera should be out for my 1-year-old shenanigans!

This all got me thinking about my own photographs. What do I want my kids to see when they look through the photos I take of them?

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I want them to have little moments frozen in time. I want them to have emotion-filled images that bring back our favorite memories. They should have the same experience of joy that I have when I look back at that photo of my mom and me!

And I want you to have the same kinds of photos of your family! Here are a few helpful tips for creating photos that are filled with emotion.

Forget the cheese

We’ve all fallen in the “Say CHEESE!” trap. It is natural for us to want to see those big beautiful smiles that we love so much. However, this can lead to fake, painful smiles that are anything but the expressions we love.

Instead of telling your child to “Say CHEESE!” consider having a conversation with her. Ask him about his day. Chat about school. Sing a favorite song. Talk about things that naturally make her smile.

Doing this will help your child to become comfortable in front of the camera. And then when a moment to smile presents itself, your child will be relaxed and natural, allowing to you capture the expressions you really love.

Get on their level

Our children do not see the world from the same perspective that we do. Getting on their level helps you capture memories the way that they experience them!

Tummy time and toddling are infinitely more impactful when captured from the floor. Crouching or laying on the floor to get the shot can make a shot that “captures the moment” into a shot that immerses you into the memory.

Pro tip: For this shot, I was laying on my stomach in the kitchen (yep, I totally do that sometimes!) while my son was playing with his toy truck. This allowed me to capture details that I otherwise would have missed from my usual overhead perspective.

Make time for fun

Capturing your kids should not be a stressful endeavor! If you sense that your kids are over it, take a break.

Consider creating fun activities to help make photo time more enticing. A messy baking session, some play time outside, a dance party, or any number of activities can be totally photo-worthy.

The key here is to make sure that the memories behind the photos are as fun as the photos themselves. No one wants to have the kids look back at the pictures someday and only have stressful memories tied to them.

Pro tip: Don’t worry about the mess. Painting and baking and play time are not tidy activities. Instead, embrace the fun your kids are having, encourage them to dive into it, and snap away!

Stay true to your kids’ personalities

You know your children better than anyone. That means that you are set for success when photographing who they truly are. Embrace that!

If you have a shy girl, there is no reason to try to make her look like a bouncy social butterfly! Instead, capture her in her perfectly quiet way.

If you have a boy who is a tornado of activity, photograph that! No need to make him sit still and pose when his natural tendency is to jump and run and play.

By letting them be who they are and working to photograph that, you will be more likely to capture the emotions they are feeling. You know them better than any photographer you could hire, so use that knowledge to help you capture them best.

Pro tip: Don’t force moments. Instead, just let moments happen. Sometimes the moments in between the “perfect” ones are the photographs we end-up loving the most.

Remember the details

Emotion is not just shown on a face. Sometimes a baby’s chubby little hands can bring back just as many memories as a smile!

Details are easy to forget as our children grow and change…but they are so important! Take time to document little curls, tiny toes, and favorite stuffed animals. One day all of those things will be part of the past and you will be glad to have the memories saved.

Pro tip: Take a day to focus on only photographing details. Instead of looking for eye contact and smiles, look for the little things that might change about your family in the future. 

Take pictures in important places

The places that will be important in your memories are not necessarily the “big event” places. Instead, the important places are those where all of the memories happen. Our backyards, bedrooms, kitchens, and living spaces are the ones that will take up the most real estate in our hearts.

Be sure that you don’t limit yourself to the “pretty” places in your home. Messy bedrooms and lived-in homes are worth capturing just as much as perfectly decorated nurseries.

Pro tip: Good light can make any space photo-worthy. Look for windows that your kids can sit next to or try bouncing a flash in a darker space. You can even get creative by looking for alternative light sources like refrigerator lights, iPad screens, or anything else that can illuminate a face. The key is to include the spaces where your memories happen because they are important parts of the story, too!

Your photos will be treasures to your kids someday just like photos from my childhood are treasures to me. Use these tips to help you capture the memories that will take you all back and share in the comments how you get the real moments in your photos!

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15 Composition Tips to Improve Your Photography

Yellow Aspen Trees

The following article contains a list of important composition tips to help you take the strongest possible photos. It goes without saying that composition is a very personal creative decision, so there are no truly universal do’s and don’ts. Nevertheless, there are certain techniques you can use to improve your photos, from forming a vision to refining your initial composition in the field. The goal is to make your image’s final message as clear and effective as possible.

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Is Chimping in Photography Good or Bad?

Chimpanzee Crop

Photographers are pretty good at coming up with creative, self-deprecating insults. From GAS (gear acquisition syndrome) to pixel peeping, just look on any photography forum today and you’ll find a new term that makes you smile and cringe at the same time. One of my personal favorites is chimping – a word that describes photographers who review their photos too frequently, often at the worst of times. But perhaps chimping doesn’t fully deserve the bad reputation it has.

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Bridging the creative gap: Make the photos of your dreams a reality

Have you ever had an idea for a photo that you simply cannot ignore? This happened to me a while back.

My idea was inspired by an area under our house that is covered by our back porch. The light in this area is similar to that of a garage. I knew that I could use the inverse square law here to get a clean black background while my son played with bubbles.

But alas, when I set up the shot I made a mistake and set him too deep in the shadows. He wasn’t that into it and so I only had a few minutes to shoot. By the time I realized my mistake, he was done and I had to give up.

I was extremely frustrated by my mistake, chastising myself for not setting it up correctly the first time. I had a vision and I couldn’t make it happen! ARGH!

A few days later I tried a simpler shot again, in that same area, just to prove to myself that I could work with that light. Learning from my mistakes, I made it happen.

It was right around this time that I became a podcast junky. I was listening to the Chase Jarvis podcast when he started talking about this thing called the creative gap. His words immediately resonated with me.

What is a creative gap?

The ‘creative gap’ is this distance between what we as artists envision ourselves creating and what we actually create. Sometimes we nail it and the gap is nil. Other times, as you might imagine, there’s a huge disparity and the gap is wide.

Having a definition for what I was going through made me feel so much better. As I continued on my photography journey and encountered the inevitable stumbles, I had a mantra in my head to get me through. “No big deal that’s just the creative gap – I can work harder.”

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Calling our mistakes the creative gap instead of blaming ourselves or feeling inadequate can remove so much unnecessary pressure. Even more, it can motivate us to work to bridge the gap instead of spending energy berating ourselves.

No matter where we are in our journey—beginner, intermediate, or pro—we are all striving to close the creative gap in one way or another. Identifying a creative gap’s existence in your photography journey means that we are pushing ourselves to learn more. Instead of being frustrated by the gap, we should celebrate it!

Illustrating the creative gap

As I listened to the podcast that day, I started reminiscing about specific photographs that required multiple attempts to successfully achieve what I had aimed to create. I am sharing those experiences with you today so that you can learn from my gaps and more easily navigate your own.

Bridging the gap to capture the perfect reflection

I had the idea for this photo when my kids were playing with the hose one afternoon. I caught one of their reflections in the window and loved the repetition.

The next night I recreated the scene and started snapping. I was unhappy with the results. Nothing I captured in-camera matched what my eyes saw in front of me.

I ended-up bribing my kids the next two evenings so that I could try again (and again). I played with different lenses, different apertures, different focal points, and different times in the evening.

I began to see that I needed the light to be bright enough to catch her reflection, but not so bright that the sky above was blown out. Needless to say, by the time I got what I wanted, my kids were a little burnt out on this!

Bridging the gap to achieve pleasing skin tones

The light in this photograph is entering the scene from a west-facing window. I wanted to take advantage of the colors and shapes of my son’s bedding by shooting from overhead.

The first time I attempted this shot it was early afternoon. The sun was a little too bright coming through, making it difficult to achieve good skin tones and exposure.

The next day I tried again. But this time I set-up the shot mid-morning when the light coming through the window was more subtle. And I got exactly what I wanted.

Bridging the gap to create a perfect shadow

It took my poor little one about 20 times of walking up those stairs over two days to capture this scene!

On the first attempt I used a plug-in lamp with a circular shade as my light source. I realized that the bulb was not strong enough to create distinct shadow.

Rather than being defeated, I headed to the hardware store the following day to purchase a stronger bulb. And we tried again.

I played with my positioning, the lamp positioning, and even changed which hand in which my son was holding his stuffed elephant. I ended up flipping the photo in post processing to strengthen the composition.

What bridges the creative gap?

When I analyze the photos that took several attempts to achieve my vision, there are two specific elements that make or break the photos. First, the light has to be just right. Second, the subject has to be just right.

Sure, there are times when I get perfect light and a genuine expression on the first try. However, the longer I am a photographer, the more I realize that this is an exception, not the rule.

As artists, we have to work to bridge the gap. We have to identify what is most important to making our photographs successful. Then we must make every effort—sometimes over the course of multiple shooting set-ups—to have those elements for success present in our work.

It’s about the process, not the product

Another lesson I have learned through this process is that the successful execution of a vision is not the most rewarding part. Rather, the most important factor is what we learn while trying.

When bridging a creative gap photo, we are working to better understand light. We are working to better understand our subjects. And we are setting ourselves up to see these elements more clearly on the first try next time. We are doing the work and continuously learning.

Doing the work to bridge the gap

So what can you do to bridge your creative gap?  Stop beating yourself up for not getting the shot you want on the first try! Get out of your head and GET. TO. WORK.

These are a few ideas to get you in the zone of bridging your creative gap.

Shoot often

Ideally this would be every day or every week. Committing to a 365 or 52 project is a great idea. It is a large undertaking but is so worth it as you will see a huge difference in your work over time.

Related: Why YOU should start a 365 photography project this year

There are days when you won’t feel inspired to pick-up your camera. But there are always lessons to learn every time you shoot. Rather than aiming to get a portfolio-worthy shot every time, aim to learn something with each photo.

I also urge you to edit and share your photos as you work through your project. There are always lessons to learn in post processing and by sharing your work with others, you open up the opportunity to learn from others.

Educate yourself

Whether it be an online workshop, attending an in-person conference, or reading through the thousands of tutorials on the Clickin Moms forum, find every opportunity you can to learn. The more you fill your head with knowledge, the quicker you will be able to apply that knowledge to your photographs.

Always seek inspiration

Creative inspiration is everywhere. Whether it be a great song on the radio, a beautiful sky at sunset, or a really great book, there are infinite ways to keep yourself inspired. And an inspired photographer is a productive photographer!

One of my favorite things to do is go through “feed stopper” photographs I have saved on Instagram. I am inspired by the artistry of the photographers I follow and am also able to analyze their technique and execution. I can reflect on what I love about each photo and often find myself motivated to try and translate that in my only work.

Never stop building your bridge

It doesn’t matter how you choose to tackle the creative gap. What matters is that you are perpetually working to bridge it.

The mark of a great artist is that she never feels like she has reached the finish line. She never feels like she has bridged the gap completely. Instead, she crosses one gap and then seeks another to build a new bridge.

Celebrate your challenges in photography – it means you are pushing yourself and your limits. It means you are in the process of becoming a better photographer every day. And that is something to be excited about!

Tell us in the comments below your favorite lessons learned while bridging your own creativity gaps.

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