Ship Prow-like Structures Atop An Uniden Canvas Gallery Wrap 18×24 Photo On Canvas

Ship Prow-like Structures Atop An Uniden Canvas Gallery Wrap 18×24 Photo On Canvas


Ship prow-like structures atop an uniden” is an art print by Alfred Eisenstaedt from The Life Picture Collection. Get photo prints of “Ship prow-like structures atop an uniden” in a variety of frames, styles, and materials. Photographer Bio Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995), or Eisie to those who knew him, received his first camera as a gift from his uncle at 14, a few years after moving to Berlin from Poland with his family. At 17, he was drafted to the German army. His interest in photography blossomed while recovering from a shrapnel wound. He became a regular at museums, studying light and composition. By 31, he was a full-time photographer. In 1933 he was sent to Italy where he shot the first meeting between Hitler and Mussolini. Two years later, when Hitler came to power, Eisie immigrated to America. Soon after arriving in New York, he was hired along with three other photographers-Margaret Bourke-White, Thomas McAvoy and Peter Stackpole-by Time Inc. founder Henry Luce for a secret start-up venture known as “Project X.” Six months later, Life magazine premiered on November 23, 1936. The first issue sold for 10 cents and featured five pages of Eisie’s pictures. His most famous photo was the kiss in Times Square on V-J day, about which he said, “I was running along the street grabbing any and every girl in sight. Whether she was a grandmother, stout, thin, old, didn’t make any difference. None of the pictures that were possible pleased me. Then, suddenly in a flash I saw something white being grabbed. I turned and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse.” Over his career, Eisie shot a total of nearly 100 covers for Life magazine and some 10,000 prints. The Life Picture Collection From one of the most iconic magazines ever to hit the shelves comes The Life Collection – an archive of some of the most recognizable imagery of the 20th Century. Documenting events in politics, culture, celebrity, the arts and the American experience, these compelling and provocative photographs include the works of some of the greatest photographers capturing some of the greatest moments in history.

Price: $
Sold by Photos.com by Getty Images

Posted in Camera Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Why Good Photographers Take Bad Photos

Have you ever seen a spectacular image and been flabbergasted when you saw that the photographer was an amateur – and they used their phone? Or looked at the website of a pro only to be disappointed by a slew of boring photos? Maybe you know someone who knows everything about photography has has perfect technique, yet still takes lacklustre images. Counterintuitively, being good at photography does not guarantee good photos.

Let’s define photography as the art and craft of image making. Good photography requires a knowledge of both technical and artistic techniques, from the exposure triangle to visual weight. A good photograph, on the other hand, is not dependent on technique. Certainly a well composed and well exposed photo will be better than a poorly crafted one, all else being equal. However, the draw of an image comes primarily from the subject of the photo. A terrible photo of an amazing subject will always be more interesting than an amazing photo of a terrible subject.

PhotographyLifeEileenDonan1WIP1crop4

NIKON D610 + 12-24mm f/4.5-5.6 @ 24mm, ISO 250, 1/200, f/8.0
The beauty of Eilean Donan castle in Scotland makes up for my heavy-handed editing.

Consider the recently famous photo of Usain Bolt grinning back at his competitors. It’s not 100% sharp. The panning technique was good, but not perfect. Imagine that another photographer, a true master at panning, had captured a stunningly sharp image at the same moment, but from the other side of the track. The image would be technically better – sharper, more contrast between the still bodies and the blurred legs, and a feat of skill. But it would show the back of Usain Bolt’s head rather than his grin, and would be a completely worthless image. The subject of the photo, and what the subject’s doing, is more important than anything else in a picture.

The professional photographer is often mentioned as an example of a good photographer. While this is usually the case, sometimes pro photographers are simply great at business instead – but let’s assume that the pros are better than the amateurs for this discussion, even though it’s not always accurate. Why would a professional photographer take worse photos than an amateur? We’ve all seen this before. Sometimes we even see it in one person – their professional work is bland and uninspiring while their personal work is stunning. The key is the subject. A professional is paid to photograph whatever their client wants them to. From concrete office buildings to grease-stained car parts, these assignments rarely feature truly beautiful subjects. And even when there is a good subject, the professional is given a deadline to deliver the images, which can reduce the creative potential of the subject and encourage “safe” shots that will make the client happy. Amateurs have no such limitations. No one’s looking over their shoulder and preventing them from trying riskier compositions, and no one’s telling them to shoot boring subjects. The amateurs shoot only what interests them, and often this makes for a wonderful image.

PhotographyLifeMistyrocks2

NIKON D5200 + 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 @ 18mm, ISO 640, 30/1, f/8.0
Very few professionals are paid to wake up in time to capture the coastal sunrise.

I might even take it a step further, and suggest that good amateur photographers often take worse photos than worse amateur photographers. Compare two enthusiasts — one lives in the mountains of New Zealand, while another lives in the suburbs of Michigan, USA. It’s a matter of walking outside at sunset to get a spectacular image when you’re living in a beautiful area. There’s no special skill required — using an ND filter might help, as would some tripod skills, but really it’s a matter of snapping the shot in the right direction. The photographer living in Michigan has a greater challenge though — if they walked outside and snapped a shot they’d capture a view of the majestic pre-fab home. There’s no easy way to get a great shot, so the Michigan photographer needs to find ways to make boring subjects more interesting through the use of more advanced techniques like elaborate lighting, perspectives, and processing. They’ll be forced to become a better photographer, and yet it’ll still be difficult for them to take better photos than the enthusiast with New Zealand’s ancient beauty on their front porch.

As a side-note, it’s worth looking at Instagram here. Instagram knows that the majority of users are not great photographers, and that the majority of photos don’t capture great subjects. There’s nothing at all interesting about a Starbucks coffee cup, a suburban sunset, or even most people. So Instagram offers filters. Suddenly the photo isn’t about the coffee cup, it’s about the interplay of colour and contrast that the filter’s created as it interacts with the image. The subject becomes the filter itself. Provided the original photograph was less interesting than the filter, the image will be improved by Instagram. Photographers do similar things by making light, or colour, or geometry the subject of a photo rather than the physical subject itself. In commercial photography, there’s nothing interesting about an object – but there is something interesting about gradient lighting that you never see in daily life.

PhotographyLifeSigma12-24DGII

NIKON D5200 + 105mm f/2.8 @ 105mm, ISO 100, 1/160, f/16.0
There’s nothing special about this lens, but the mysterious lighting and brilliant colours make this image into something completely new.

Finally, bad photographers take more good images than good photographers because there are simply more bad photographers. Most people don’t have much in the way of photography skills, yet everyone now takes multiple photos a day thanks to their cell phones. Every day more photos are taken, and every day it’s more likely that the great photos were taken by the average Joe. While good photographers will always take better images of the same subject, there are only so many great photographers to go around, and sometimes amazing things happen where the only person around knows nothing about the art of photography. Yet their snapshot of an incredible moment will still be a more interesting capture than a pro’s great shot of a boring moment.

Remember this when things seem unfair. When your beautifully crafted image gets no attention next to someone else’s snapshot. Technique matters, but subject is king. As National Geographic photographer Jim Richardson said, “If you want to be a better photographer, stand in front of more interesting stuff.”

If you enjoyed this article, be sure to share with your friends and comment below with your thoughts. If you didn’t enjoy it, still comment below and share your perspective!


Lauchlan Toal is a food photographer and writer based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He’s currently working on a new website focused on creativity in photography, with more information and a free guide to learning photography at Unlock Creative Photography.

The post Why Good Photographers Take Bad Photos appeared first on Photography Life.

Photography Life

Posted in Photograpy How To | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Lens Is the Eye of the Camera – Choose Wisely

Lenses are the eye of the camera – and you don’t want a lazy eye on your new digital camera.

Sharpness, speed, focus, biggest aperture (smallest f-number), zoom length and technical gizmo’s all come to play when choosing the perfect mate for a new dslr. Let’s run down the list and see what it all means:

Sharpness – The most important aspect of every lens. You want to cut diamonds – let the others try to make jewelery out of coal.

Speed – The performance of the lens as a whole, how fast the camera is able to auto-focus, how responsive it is to your tweaking and how well the buttons and rings are placed.

Focus – If it has auto-focus and a manual switch for auto-focus/manual focus. The speed of auto-focus can be a deal breaker. You don’t notice it until you stand there with the sunset and the girl and the perfect wind – so be aware!

Aperture – Basically how big and small the opening can become. Usually the price for one lens to another can differ 100% from a lens with F 1.4 to a lens with F 2.8. That is a whole step difference but amateurs sometimes don’t know and buy the “Best-price” one and think they got a steal. They didn’t. Here the rule of thumb is you get what you pay. 

Zoom – If it is a zoom lens – how far it will go and at what quality cost for the whole image. Look at the sharpness in the corners fully zoomed in and fully zoomed out for a quick do-I-like-it that you can do in store.

Gizmo’s – Now a days there are quite a few tricks in the Lens-makers-bag. Some important ones can be VR (a stabilizing feature) coating (some coatings remove almost all flare and fringe) exotic stuff like DC (out of focus control) and the sliders and buttons that can make or break a lens.

There are Pros and cons to last a lifetime for a old Greek philosopher – thankfully I’m not one so let’s get down to the nitty-gritty:

First: You want as low a F-number as you can get. This have so many advantages it is ridiculous:

Low-light photography – you need half the light with a f 1.4 than a f 2.8
Bokeh – a big opening renders the fore/background as soft clouds
Sharpness – 98% of all lenses perform best when dialed down two or three steps. The lower (bigger hole) you start – the better.
Options – you can always get down from a big opening, but you can’t go bigger with a small one.
Second: Handling – you must be comfortable with how the lens works. Every pro knows this and we all have lenses with perfect specs that just don’t get used. The handling is wrong. It can be as simple as slow auto-focus or that it is to heavy. So the tip here is to try in store or loan/rent the lens over a weekend.

Third: One all-around-lens is a myth. You will always compromise with a 12-300 zoom lens. No matter what the “experts” say. Just look at the lowest F-stop. Oh its 3.5 is it? and that is just at the start of the range, it keeps on down the latter the more you zoom? You probably don’t want to go  high-ISO just to zoom in. There are good zoom lenses, look at the F-stop: 2.8 is ok-dokie for a zoom. More than that and I would look for options. One alternative would be if it has stabilization (VR on some makers lenses) then it might be fine at lower.

Fourth: Is it an investment? DSLR’s today will be junk tomorrow. Lenses keeps on going for decades – better to buy yesterdays DSLR and put a real lens on it than today’s DSLr with a kit-lens.

Fifth: This might be a disappointment so hold tight – The lens don’t mean jack. Great photography can be done with a mobile-phone and raw talent (a few pretty people in front might also work wonders) so don’t go around thinking you can’t afford to take good pictures. Good pictures are all around you. You just need to pull the trigger at the right time, at the right place.

Linus Öhman is a Photographer and Entrepreneur living in Sweden. Having worked as a graphic designer and photographer both at large corporations and magazines and as a freelance for many years he recently started a network for “quick guides to the best of the best” with initial focus on photography. Websites:
http://www.mememe.se – The photographer page.
http://www.mostawesome.info – The network site for all the micro sites.

Posted in What Is Aperture | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

A Man Standing In The Lumberyard Of Seat Canvas Gallery Wrap 18×24 Photo On Canvas

A Man Standing In The Lumberyard Of Seat Canvas Gallery Wrap 18×24 Photo On Canvas


A man standing in the lumberyard of Seat” is an art print by Alfred Eisenstaedt from the Masters collection. Get photo prints of “A man standing in the lumberyard of Seat” in a variety of frames, styles, and materials. Photographer Bio Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995), or Eisie to those who knew him, received his first camera as a gift from his uncle at 14, a few years after moving to Berlin from Poland with his family. At 17, he was drafted to the German army. His interest in photography blossomed while recovering from a shrapnel wound. He became a regular at museums, studying light and composition. By 31, he was a full-time photographer. In 1933 he was sent to Italy where he shot the first meeting between Hitler and Mussolini. Two years later, when Hitler came to power, Eisie immigrated to America. Soon after arriving in New York, he was hired along with three other photographers-Margaret Bourke-White, Thomas McAvoy and Peter Stackpole-by Time Inc. founder Henry Luce for a secret start-up venture known as “Project X.” Six months later, Life magazine premiered on November 23, 1936. The first issue sold for 10 cents and featured five pages of Eisie’s pictures. His most famous photo was the kiss in Times Square on V-J day, about which he said, “I was running along the street grabbing any and every girl in sight. Whether she was a grandmother, stout, thin, old, didn’t make any difference. None of the pictures that were possible pleased me. Then, suddenly in a flash I saw something white being grabbed. I turned and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse.” Over his career, Eisie shot a total of nearly 100 covers for Life magazine and some 10,000 prints.

Price: $
Sold by Photos.com by Getty Images

Posted in Camera Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

On the Road: Exploring Glacier National Park

The past few days filming our landscape photography video have been fun and exhausting, and we’ve seen some wonderful sights along the way. After leaving Yellowstone National Park, we headed north to film some mountains and snow. For our next stop, we spent about a week in and around Glacier National Park. Although we missed the peak wildflower season in Glacier by a few weeks, the park was still absolutely beautiful — and very nice for photography.

The coolest part of Glacier was the Going to the Sun Road, which leads directly up to the tallest peaks in the park. After a 45 minute drive, you can stand thousands of feet above the valley you just left, looking down over a beautiful view. From rivers to waterfalls and beautiful trees, the scenery throughout the park is unbelievable — especially from such a high elevation!

Glacier National Park landscape

The mountains in Glacier aren’t as tall as the Rocky Mountains, or even the Grand Tetons, but they have an enormous amount of character. There is a reason why this park is so popular — and it is very popular, especially at the time of year that we visited. Finding a parking spot at the visitor’s center at the top of the mountain was almost impossible! In the valley, though, there were plenty of river scenes that worked well for isolating details and interesting rocks. For photography, there wasn’t a bad place to be.

Glacier National Park Rock

We managed to film a large portion of our Composition video in the park, but there’s still more work to do. This is our most important section, for obvious reasons, and likely our longest as well. For some additional variety, the rest of this chapter focuses on Mount Rainier and Olympic National Park. So far, we are excited about the way everything looks!

Glacier National Park Sunset

One last point: if you’ve never been to this area of the US, you’ll probably be surprised by the popularity of huckleberries around Glacier, in everything from chocolate to barbecue sauce. As unexpected as they may be, though, the huckleberries are very good and well worth trying. You never know what you’ll find on your travels! Photography is incredible, but, just as often, the things you see along the way are what you will remember.

The post On the Road: Exploring Glacier National Park appeared first on Photography Life.

Photography Life

Posted in Photograpy How To | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment