Like musicians, painters, chefs, and astrophysicists, photographers require two major skill sets: technical and creative. The proportional balance between technique and creativity might differ according to your profession, personality, or career level (amateurs are also on a career path as they advance in their pursuit). For photographers, technique and creativity have rather equal importance.
Technique Enables Creativity, Creativity Fuels Technique
If we consider each photographic project a journey, technique is the road map. Before everything, there is an idea that is the planned endpoint of the journey. The road map helps us to assess the viability: Can we get there? It also enables the planning: Which route should we take? How laborious will it be? What gear is required? When can we get there? If we encounter difficulties along the way, the road map also helps us to maneuver around them. Technique is what makes creativity possible.
Just as bold travelers explore domains that lie off the beaten path, bold photographers attempt projects they might not yet know how to accomplish. With solid technique as a road map, they know they can get to a never-before-visited destination. From there, creativity drives the process and outcome to a higher level.
From Capture to Postproduction
Capture and postproduction are two distinct sets of photographic techniques. Capture is the process of creating original images in the camera. Our goal should be to produce, in the camera, high-quality captures that realize our vision as fully as possible. When these goals are achieved, we have good materials to work with in the postproduction phase. This book is about both phases of the process. It is a field guide for photographers to use with camera in hand, but it also covers the postproduction techniques for refining your results.
Exposure Is the Beginning of Great Photography
The life cycle of a photo (or the “photographic workflow,” to use a more technical term) begins with exposure. The process of exposure is more complicated than ever, thanks to the ever-increasing complexity of digital cameras. This book will examine that seemingly complicated process, simplify it, and make exposure and metering techniques easier to master. Be sure to work through each of the hands-on exercises and advance your skills to a point where metering for and capturing the right exposure becomes almost second nature.
Cell phone cameras are achieving amazing levels of quality. The shots I make on my Samsung S5 (when I do not have my DSLR handy) sneak into my serious work from time to time. However, cell phone cameras are not good learning tools. They do not let you control the exposure settings and they veil all the nuances. To be blunt, they assume the user knows nothing. Cell phone cameras are to a photographer as instant noodles are to a chef; they might taste good, but they won’t get you anywhere if they are the only thing you use. So keep that cell phone camera in your pocket for now. Pick up that DSLR and learn photography with me, starting from exposure.
“Just as bold travelers explore domains that lie off the beaten path, bold photographers attempt projects they might not yet know how to accomplish.”