Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Child s Dog-Attack Rescue Caught on Tape

Child s Dog-Attack Rescue Caught on Tape





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Child s Dog-Attack Rescue Caught on Tape



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Child s Dog-Attack Rescue Caught on Tape

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Learn Digital Photography - Top 10 Tips For Teaching Children Photography





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If you can get a child learning the fundamentals of photography from an early age, imagine what photos they will be creating as an adult. Lay down those foundations now and they will thank you for it later.

I started my photography as an eight year old with my grandfather giving me my first camera and processing my photos in his darkroom. What a feeling of fulfilment when those first images appeared in the developing tray. I had created something. I never looked back. The bug had bitten. I have now been a photographer for over forty years. What a heritage he gave me. You too can give your child that same heritage. Here's where to start.

1. Encourage

With the age of digital there is no cost when shooting photos so encourage your children to shoot often and regularly. The excitement of getting that great image stimulates the hobby. As the old adage goes, nothing breeds success like success. When they take their first really stunning shot it only encourages them to do it again and again. You will be the reason for their success, so encourage.

2. Experiment

Getting them trying new things and ideas and experimenting. Change angles, get in closer and teach them to use their feet to find new and different viewpoints. This will stimulate their creativity and allow them to explore all their options. Train the mind from an early age to think before pressing the shutter button.

3. Holding the camera

Once they are taking images and having fun start teaching them some of the fundamentals. The first and most basic one is how to hold the camera. It sounds logical to most of us but, if you don't do this bad habits are formed and they become hard to correct as time goes by.

4. Hold the camera straight

Get them watching horizons from an early age. It is essential to learn how to keep a level image. This is fundamental to good photo taking. There is nothing worse than a great image with a crooked horizon or buildings that are slanted.

5. Get in closer

This is the easiest way to improve any photography. Getting in closer focuses on the subject, making it the most important element of the image. It allows you to exclude clutter that shouldn't be in the image.

6. Shoot lots of photos

If they are not taking lots of photos then the possibilities of improving diminish. They need to be shooting lots of images in order to practise. It is only practise that makes perfect. Gary Player, former international champion golfer, says that the harder he practises the luckier he gets. Relying on luck will not make you a photographer but practise will.

7. Learn the basics

There is never a time like the present to learn the fundamentals of photography. Buy a book, do a course or find a mentor. These are all keys to getting your children going in photography. Basic rules like composition, colour and form and texture will help form the foundation for great images.

8. Focal points

Teach them what focal points are and how to place a subject using the rule of thirds. Unless there is a focal point in a photo the images is pointless. These points of interest or subjects should always have prime position in the photo. If they learn these keys early they'll shoot great photos for the rest of their lives.

9. Balance

It is great for a child to have an interest in one type of photography but at an early age it's best to have a general interest in a variety of genres. Specialisation can come at a later stage. Variety is the spice of life so get them shooting everything.

10. Review

Sit with your child and review their images, taking time to compliment and encourage. They need to know what they are doing right first before you point out what is wrong. By reviewing their images on a regular basis they will learn quickly in a comfortable place allowing rapid growth.

There is no better time to start learning that from an early age. The great masters of art and music all started their professions at a very young age. Today there are books and courses for kids so there is no excuse if you are not a skilled photographer. Let them loose and see what happens.


Learn Digital Photography - Top 10 Tips For Teaching Children Photography


Basic Photography Techniques Kids



Basic Photography Techniques Kids

Learn Digital Photography - Top 10 Tips For Teaching Children Photography



Learn Digital Photography - Top 10 Tips For Teaching Children Photography
Learn Digital Photography - Top 10 Tips For Teaching Children Photography



Basic Photography Techniques Kids


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Friday, March 22, 2013

Quick Tip - Getting aciculate photos with Single Focus Mode

Quick Tip - Getting aciculate photos with Single Focus Mode





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Quick Tip - Getting aciculate photos with Single Focus Mode



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Quick Tip - Getting aciculate photos with Single Focus Mode

Quick Tip - Getting aciculate photos with Single Focus Mode


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Photo Tips For Setting Up a Home Photography Studio





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INTRODUCTION

Studio portraiture is very specialized and has always been the "elite" photographer's playground. While it is true that high end studio photography requires a great amount of study, practice and mentoring; it is also equally true that an interested amateur with some decent equipment can take very nice family and portrait photos with some practice.

BASIC STUDIO EQUIPMENT

You are going to need a few key elements for some basic studio photography. First is some studio lighting. Three strobe lights will likely give you as much studio lighting as you will need to get by in most lighting situations. Some studio setups have as many as 6 lights, reflectors and various diffusers and use high end 600-800 Watt per Second strobes that cost thousands of dollars. Don't worry! You can likely find a good starter set with 300-350 WPS lights in places like eBay, Henry's or your local camera store. You should prepare to spend in the neighbourhood of about 00.00 to get strobes, stands, soft boxes, umbrellas and maybe a reflector. You can also consider a wireless strobe trigger although you can likely get away with the cord that will come with the lights. Most "package" systems come with a carrying case as well so the will save your equipment from any damage.

Next item(s) will be backdrops. You may want to consider a number of things. Good quality Muslin backdrops can be found for very reasonable money on eBay. I buy all my backdrops from eBay vendors. Like anything, make sure you check the seller rating and their eBay store to make sure they are reputable. You may also want to consider a backdrop stand. That will assist in properly hanging your backdrops in almost any location. Questions you need to ask yourself are

1. How many colours do you want?

2. How large do you need (will you be doing large group photos)?

3. How much space do you have to use to set them up?

4. Do you need a backdrop hanger?

Now that you have some of your basic information, you will need to select colors for your backdrops. A nice standard grey, blue and maybe a brown/red base backdrop will usually be enough to get you going. You also need to know the size. 9x6 is a good standard muslin used for portraits however if you can get a good deal, go for 10 x 10 and that way you can have some extra backdrop to use for full body shots and even enough for some small group shots. Backdrops of that size are generally around 0 each however, you can often find great deals on eBay if you are patient.

SETTING UP THE STUDIO

Now that you have the gear, it's time to decide how to set up your studio. Hopefully you have already found yourself some room in your house that you can use as a "studio only" location. If not, you can go "mobile" with most equipment and set up wherever there is room. Ideally you would like to have a room that has a good amount of ceiling space, enough room to set up your subject and light. A room or area 15x15 is a good starting point but you may have some limitations for larger groups. If you are mostly doing your pets, family and other small subjects and groups this should suffice.

If you have the ability to set aside your "stage" and keep it set up, the best thing to do is to set your backdrops up against one wall and your lighting off to the side. Your lighting needs will vary from shot to shot so it is best to just have the lights on their stands set to the lowest point on the light stand. When you know what type of lighting you are going to need, you pull your lights as needed and set them up (with a soft box, umbrella...).

IN SHORT

Studio shooting can be a lot of fun. It makes for really great home done family portraits and can even make you a couple dollars. Once you start feeling comfortable taking portraits, why not start doing some friends portraits? After some practice, some study and some experience with various portrait styles; you will start to see some great results and will be the envy of all your friends!


Photo Tips For Setting Up a Home Photography Studio


Basic Photography Techniques Kids



Basic Photography Techniques Kids

Photo Tips For Setting Up a Home Photography Studio



Photo Tips For Setting Up a Home Photography Studio
Photo Tips For Setting Up a Home Photography Studio

Basic Photography Techniques Kids


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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Photography Tips : Basic Photography Tips for Kids

Photography Tips : Basic Photography Tips for Kids





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Photography Tips : Basic Photography Tips for Kids



A basic photography tip for kids and beginners is to start with a regular point-and-shoot camera. Get some more basic tips from a professional photographer i...

Photography Tips : Basic Photography Tips for Kids

Photography Tips : Basic Photography Tips for Kids


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Digital Photo Tips - 3 Steps to Basic Studio Lighting Techniques





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This article will discuss the three basic steps that are essential for a proper lighting setup. A basic studio setup includes a main light, a fill light and a background light. Once you master this simple approach, you can relax knowing that you are almost always going to be on the right track to getting the effect you want.

The first step will be to set up your main light. This will typically be a floodlight. But where do you place it? It depends on the effect you are looking for, but usually this light is placed at about 45 degrees to the side of your subject and slightly about. Remember however, this is only one location. Your placement of the main light establishes the basic lighting mood. Try moving the light around to see the different effects it has.

Because the main light will cast deep shadows, we will also introduce a fill-in light to help with revealing some details hiding in the darkness. The reason for adding this light is that shadows look darker in a photo than they do in real life. So we need to add a little light to make the image appear more natural. Experiment with both the location and intensity of your fill light to achieve dramatically different looks.

As a final piece, you might consider adding a background light. This light is aimed at the background behind your subject and is used to help separate the subject from the background. Again, this is an area where small changes can have drastically different effects. Try using a floodlight in one scene and a spot in another, then compare the two. Now try moving them around or using a different intensity.

You may ask if all three light lights are necessary every time. No is the simple answer but go through a mental checklist for each setup. What is the effect you want? If you observe how each light affects the scene, you can experiment with each to come up with a package that suites your needs the best.


Digital Photo Tips - 3 Steps to Basic Studio Lighting Techniques


Basic Photography Techniques Kids



Basic Photography Techniques Kids

Digital Photo Tips - 3 Steps to Basic Studio Lighting Techniques



Digital Photo Tips - 3 Steps to Basic Studio Lighting Techniques
Digital Photo Tips - 3 Steps to Basic Studio Lighting Techniques

Basic Photography Techniques Kids


A basic photography tip for kids and beginners is to start with a regular point-and-shoot camera. Get some more basic tips from a professional photographer i...




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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Writing Your Life Story - Tips And Techniques For Success

Writing Your Life Story - Tips And Techniques For Success



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Once a luxury of the rich and famous, technology has, for the first time in history, made it possible for anyone to capture, share and preserve their most precious life stories. With the advent of computers, the Internet, digital photography, video, and audio, anyone can capture the richness and texture of their life stories. These personal histories will be appreciated by family, friends, and future generations.

Today it is possible to easily blend the art of traditional biography and memoir with powerful new technologies into a new form of individual life storytelling: the personal life history. Personal life histories are satisfying to create. And, because of the interactive multimedia possibilities inherent in computers and the web, a well-done personal life history can be rich and fully rounded in ways that are impossible to achieve in text-only memoir or biography. But most importantly, personal life histories preserve vital individual and family stories. And, when properly done, they will last for generations.

In this article you will discover how to use time-honored life story writing techniques along with the latest technologies to create a story that is uniquely "you."

The Art of Traditional Life-Story Formats

For anyone interested in creating their own autobiography, memoir or personal life history, it is important to understand the distinctions between these forms of telling one's own life story. To over-generalize for a moment, an autobiography is more fact-based, while a memoir is more emotion-based.

Autobiographies are written by the subject, sometimes with the collaboration of another writer. Autobiographical works take many forms, from intimate writings made during life that are not necessarily intended for publication (including letters, diaries, journals, memoirs, and reminiscences) to the formal autobiography. Interestingly, the autobiography format does not necessarily have to be true. It may also be a literary fictional tale.

Memoirs are a form of personal recollection that has grown enormously in popularity in recent times. Memoirs often focus on more subjective recollections such as memories, feelings, and emotions and are generally written from the first-person viewpoint. The memoir is often focused on capturing certain meaningful highlights or moments.

In his own Memoir, Palimpest, Gore Vidal writes that "a memoir is how one remembers one's own life, while an autobiography is history, requiring research, dates, facts double-checked."

Memoirs usually focus on a brief period of time or a series of connected events (an autobiography covers a longer time period). In a memoir, the writer is usually retrospective, and contemplating past events. Memoirs may incorporate the techniques of storytelling such as setting, plot, conflict, character development, foreshadowing, flashback, irony or symbolism. And lastly, writing one's memoir often has a therapeutic effect for the writer.

Oral History Recordings

An oral history is a verbatim transcription of an interview, left in the narrator's exact words. These are usually left in a question-and-answer style and are an economical way to preserve family stories. A recording system with a good-quality microphone and a quiet spot free from interruptions are all that is really needed to capture an oral history. It helps to have questions prepared in advance of the interview.

Oral histories are usually recorded using analog tape or digital recording equipment, but it is also possible to record directly into a personal computer. Oral histories are often transcribed (typed or word processed) into a document format. The conversational style is appealing for its easygoing informality.

Caveats: Recording formats and standards are constantly evolving and could become difficult or impossible to play back if the equipment becomes obsolete. Taped recordings decay over time.

Video History Recordings

Do-it-Yourself: At the basic level, it's easy and fun to create a basic video history. Camcorders are relatively inexpensive, and many computers today come with basic editing software. Capturing a good video history shares all of the same prerequisites as an audio recording: a quiet spot, with questions prepared in advance. Plus, you will want an uncluttered background, flattering lighting, and right clothing to improve the quality of the end product. White shirts, pants or dresses, for example don't show up well on video. Likewise, busy patterns can be distracting. Solid light-colored neutrals or pastels are usually safe.

Professional videographers: A large number of professional video companies specialize in the creation of life story productions. Productions may range from a 10 or 15 minute short to an hour or longer mini-movie, complete with titles, music, and other Hollywood-style effects. Naturally, you'll pay more for a professional production than a homegrown effort.

When selecting a professional use all the usual smart-consumer tips. Ask for references. Ask to see samples of prior work. Get all costs, production timetables and commitments in writing. It's delightful to have movies of an individual or family. When well-executed they often have entertainment value and are great for special occasions.

Caveat: As with audio recordings, formats change over time, and media can degrade, even with proper storage methods

The Integration of Art and Technology: Web-Based Personal Life Histories

Just in the last few years, the Web has emerged as a powerful new medium for creating and sharing life stories. On the web it is not only possible, it is enjoyable and easy to create a rich multimedia story with text, photos, audio and video. This is the new format of the personal life history.

Web-based personal life histories enjoy several advantages over paper-based publishing, audio, video, or even CD life stories. Specifically, Web-based publication is updateable-one can add new information at any time. It is easily shareable among friends or family. The most advanced sites offer choices of privacy and security protection. The web is also multimedia, meaning you can add text, photos, audio, and video. Photos, audio, video are never lost, damaged destroyed. An finally, many sites offer print-on-demand, allowing you to create instant books. The books may be printed on your home printer, or sent out to small-run publishers. If you choose the small-run option, be sure to specify archival quality paper.

One of the biggest advantages of web publishing is the ability to build community around similar interests, occupations, backgrounds or life events. For example, a WWII veteran pilot who posts his story to the Web and makes it available to the public may be contacted by long-lost friends, other veterans, students, historians, museum personnel, or others interested in this pivotal chapter in American history.

Why Create Your Personal Life History?

Mark Twain once said: "There was never yet an uninteresting life. Such a thing is impossibility. Inside everyone, there is a drama, a comedy, a tragedy."

A personal life history can be as short as a few pages, or several volumes in length. Whatever the length or medium, it requires thoughtfulness and sometimes quite a bit of work to accomplish. But the work is worthwhile because it has the ability to influence generations ahead. Your personal life history may leave a legacy for your children and grandchildren. As with memoir, writing a personal history allows you to examine and reflect on your life up to the present day. It lets you add your story to the larger historical record of your family, city, and country. And lastly, if you don't do it, who will?

Start with a Timeline of Life Chapters

How does one start to tell the story of a life that may cover 60, 70, 80 years or more? Often it's helpful to create a chronological timeline of major events in your life. It helps to jot down a few notes around key phases in your life. In fact, you may already be thinking of your life as a book, with separate, distinct chapters built around important life episodes.

Of course, not everyone's life follows an identical chronological sequence, but here are a few ideas for chapter headings for your book or story. GreatLifeStories.com uses the following "chapters" to organize life stories:

o Your Beginnings

o In Your Neighborhood

o School Days

o Off to Work

o Romance and Marriage

o War and Peace

o Triumphs and Tragedies

o Words of Wisdom

o Humor

o Words of Gratitude

The chapter system is very flexible. For example, you don't have to start your life story with the days of your birth and youth. Perhaps you had a fascinating experience during the war. As with a movie, you might open your life story with that "scene," then tell the story how you got there.

Once you've got an idea for the "flow," of your story, here are some more specific guidelines to help add color, texture, and authenticity:

Just start writing! Do a mind dump. Get it out of your head and down on paper, the computer, the tape recorder, wherever. Don't worry about how it sounds. Just write. Resist the temptation to edit yourself; there will be time for editing later. Be yourself. Don't worry if your grammar or spelling isn't perfect. Write it as you would say it.Honesty is everything. The best writing tells it like it happened. Include humor. Favorite jokes, stories, anecdotesDetail, detail, detail. What kind of floor did the kitchen have? What color was the scarf she wore when you first met? Go at a comfortable pace. Don't try to capture an entire lifetime in a single session of furious writing. Write, allow time to reflect, and return again to writing. Consult others. Family members and friends can be invaluable sources of facts and interpretation.Use photos to jog your memory. Tip: Set out photos in a timeline of your life, starting from your very youngest days, and moving through current times. Write or record to your visual storyboardLook for themes in your life. Themes are broad ideas that are central to your life. Did you always want to be a pilot? A preacher? Own a restaurant? Be a farmer? Tell the story of how you met your goal, or how the goal changed to something else totally unexpected.

Here are just a few other thematic life story possibilities: a. The Spiritual quest b. The Confession c. The Travelogue d. The Portrait e. The Complaint f. Humor g. The Family history h. The Road to Recovery i. War Story j. Romance

Another Option: Hire a Professional

Most of this article has been focused on creating the do-it-yourself personal life history. There is, of course, the option of working with a professional. The right professional writer or videographer is a highly skilled interviewer and has the proper tools and equipment. And, believe it or not, it is sometimes easier for someone to open up in front of a stranger rather than in front of a family member.

There are many approaches to working with writers or videographers. However, there are a number of similarities in common. The writer/videographer often:

1) Meets with you to determine the scope and cost of the project.

2) Usually sets up taped interview sessions. Depending on your objectives, these may be an hour or two, or 10, 20 hours or more.

3) The recording is transcribed and edited with your input and guidance

4) Once a final manuscript/movie is agreed upon, it may be sent out for printing or duplication.

5) For books, personal history professionals recommend archival bindings and acid-free paper for longevity

6) You receive the number of books/movies agreed upon in your contract.

7) Be sure to discuss services, fees and end products in advance, and get all agreements in writing.

Thanks to high technology, the art of capturing and preserving the stories from one's own life is now open to more people and easier than ever before. A new genre of personal storytelling is emerging that draws on the literary traditions of the autobiography and memoir, while adding audio, video, and web technology to create personal life histories. On the Web, these personal stories personal life histories are multimedia, collaborative, shareable, and instantly updateable.

Enjoy capturing your life story!

References and Further Reading

Web Sites:

http://www.greatlifestories.com

Associations:

The Association of Personal Historians is a 600+ member organization of professional personal historians who create life stories in all formats: text, audio, video. http://www.personalhistorians.org

How-to Books:

There are many good books filled with different approaches and tips for writing a personal life history. Here are just a few:

Daniel, Lios, How to Write Your Own Life Story

Rainer, Tristine, Your Life as Story Books

Roorbach, Bill, Writing Life Stories


Writing Your Life Story - Tips And Techniques For Success


Basic Photography Techniques Kids



Basic Photography Techniques Kids

Writing Your Life Story - Tips And Techniques For Success



Writing Your Life Story - Tips And Techniques For Success
Writing Your Life Story - Tips And Techniques For Success

Basic Photography Techniques Kids