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Spring Break Photo Tips

Making Memorable Spring Break Shots

Spring break is often a celebration of the change of seasons; we look forward to being outdoors more and enjoying the thaw. A spring break trip is often a way for us to formally welcome the warmer months, and we have a few photo tips to help you create photographs that display the essence of this special time.

Keen on Contrasts: Depending on your location, you may find that there is still snow on the ground in a few places while the sun shines brightly and flowers beginning to bloom. Take the opportunity to photograph these two seasons living in concert with each other; it’s a wonderful way to showcase the end of one time and the beginning of another.

Keep it Candid:
You’re on vacation, so try to keep the posed pictures to a minimum, especially if you have kids with you. Bypass those forced smiles and keep your camera focused on those moments when your loved ones are engaged in play, conversations or observation. Keep your distance and leverage the use of your zoom lens in this instance. You don’t need state of the art equipment to get great shots but you do need to be aware of your surroundings. The key to getting great candids is to capture the event without intruding upon it and calling attention to yourself. Move slowly and stay in the background.

Look for Landmarks: If possible, look for a unique landmark or landscape feature that indicates your location. Much like the Eiffel Tower immediately indicates Paris, a specific sculpture, building or park can tell of your chosen holiday spot. You don’t need to be in a metropolitan city or a well-known area for this technique to work; something unique about the small town of Anywhere USA can add extra charm to what would otherwise be an average vacation photo.

Play with Perspective: A spring break getaway is the perfect time to experiment with perspective. Find yourself marveling at a historic building? Adjust your viewpoint to see which standpoint best allows you to capture the towering nature of the architecture. Shoot from several locations to see which images speak to you the most.

Share the Memories: Once you return from your trip, don’t let the images live on only on your computer. Sure, Facebook is fun, but pick a favorite photograph and bring it to us to have it enlarged and framed so you can enjoy the memory every day. You can also upload the images to our store site and order a photo book to keep on your coffee table. The vacation maybe over but the memories live on…so make sure your pictures are in a place where you can enjoy them!

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Shooting Video with a Compact Digital Camera

For years I avoided owning a camcorder. I would watch video shot by other people all the time but I seldom produced any of my own. This is because I was never satisfied with the movies I made after my attempts to use a camcorder.

My first problem is that I would capture endless hours of useless video footage. Secondly, my movies looked like a montage of bad camera handling and worse jump cuts. Friends and family left my home movie viewings suffering from vertigo and boredom. That’s a wicked combination too; you don’t feel too well but your mind is too numb to care.

Everything changed after I purchased my first compact digital camera. Maybe I should qualify that a little more and say that my attitude toward video changed, I was still quite capable of creating horrible movies. Digital cameras didn’t improve my skills; they just made it easier to delete my mistakes.

Since my compact Canon digital camera was so small it was always with me. I found that I started to seek out opportunities to shoot video so that I could improve my skills. Along the way I found a few tips that are easy to put into practice.

First, if you think about it most of the scenes we see on TV shows are made up of a whole bunch of three to six second takes all cut together. Look at the second hand on your watch, six seconds is a pretty decent amount of time. Now the lesson I learned isn’t that we have to cut a whole bunch of takes together to make a scene. Nope, we just need to make sure that we record at least four to six seconds every time we hit the record button and start shooting.

Second tip: Talk while shooting. Ain’t nothing so boring as a slow left to right pan across some scenic overlook when all we get to hear is wind noise. I guarantee that the viewer will never be as impressed with the view as you are. In this case the message and excitement are in your voice and the video is simply the supporting player.

Third: Don’t zoom while filming. Yeah, our cameras can zoom and shoot video at the same time but we really shouldn’t do it. Why? Because we’re no good at it! Seldom do you ever see a movie, TV show or news footage where the camera lens zooms. “Don’t” isn’t the same as “Never”. Zoom lenses are necessary and useful tools sometimes, just understand that it takes practice to use one and make it look good in the final movie.

Number four: Keep it short. That two hour tour you took of the Scottish castle was fascinating. You were there, we weren’t. You may well record the entire tour for your own use but don’t inflict the experience on others. Rather edit the tour to about ten or twelve minutes (or roughly five to eight minutes per event hour). Think about it this way, for the person on the tour they have tremendous range of vision; they can look anywhere and take it all in. When the guide hits a boring part the person on the tour can study the fine tapestry on the wall. However those of us who watch the video of the tour are captives of the camera’s lens; we can only see what the lens was pointed at.

Five: Learn to edit.
Yes, I saved the big one for last. Editing doesn’t have to be complicated. Really, if the photographer simply removes the bad shots and the needless scenes any video will be instantly 100% more watchable. Cutting footage out of a series of videos is easy and it can even be a little fun too. Free editors like Mac’s iMovie or Window’s Movie Maker can handle simple and basic edits such as scene deletion. Moving up to Adobe’s Premiere Elements keeps the simplicity but adds a ton more functionality.

That’s it, five easy ways to get better video. Shooting video with compact digital cameras can be fun and the results can be entertaining. While the whole subject of shooting video is very deep, in this article I’ve only touched on a few bare bones tips. Video is one of those activities that can be fun to learn while doing.

By the way, here is a little more information in support of the six second scene length mentioned in the first tip. This year select Canon compact digital cameras will feature a “Movie Digest” mode. With this mode enabled the camera will take four to six second HD movie clips each time a still image is shot. At the end of the day the camera’s computer will compile the movie clips into a complete movie ready for viewing on an HDTV. Imagine, an entire vacation day turned into an HD movie and the photographer didn’t sit at a computer for one second to cut it together. Not too bad!

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