Es seguro que en alguna ocasión has estado trabajando en Photoshop la edición de alguna de tus fotos y has necesitado navegar en la pantalla y no has encontrado una fo

Bird Eye View Demo
rma fácil y eficiente de hacerlo.

Pues hoy voy a compartir contigo alguno de los trucos que utilizo para agilizar mi trabajo de edición.  Me concentraré en el control de la navegación de la pantalla en Photoshop.

También podrás encontrar otros ”shotcuts” para photoshop® en mi otro articulo titulado Photoshop® keyboard Shortcuts – How to Help You!

Navegar ágilmente en el documento - Haz lo siguiente:

Para ver la imagen en su tamaño actual (100%) presionas CTRL-1 ( Mac -CMD-1). Para llenar el área total de la pantalla, de forma tal que puedas ver toda la imagen, presiona CRTL-0 ( Mac –CMD-0).

Para hacer “zoom -in”  o “ zoom-out”  presiona CTRL-+ y CTRL- - respectivamente.

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Post Production Tips | Digital Photography Tips

Using shutter speed for creative composition and Capture Motion

This is the fourth post in this How to craft better photos Series. I will Circular Lights - Motion Effect be talking about how controlling the shutter speed you create the effect of motion in your images.  Follow this link to read the third article titled Photography Tips - Understanding Depth of field!.

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How I see Photography?

Few years ago an alumni of one of my digital photography course asked me “What photography means for you? My immediate answer was “Photography to me, Is the ability to freeze a moment in time that was painted with light”.

That answer was not technically right but it is what photography means to me.

As humans, we see the life in front of us as continuous sequences of actions, like a movie.  The still photography allows us to stop the time from moving forward , giving us the opportunity to capture (or freeze) a fraction of time for ever, with its details, colors, lights and shadows.

However, the still photography allows us to communicate motion!

Leer mas de: Photography Tips - Understanding Shutter Speed...

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Digital Photography Tips

Using apertures for creative composition and relative sharpness

This is the third post in this How to craft better photos Series. I will exposure-trianglebe talking about the depth of field (DOF) and how to use aperture to control it.  Understanding DOF will allow you to create better images, with better composition.  Follow this link to read the second article titled Exposure Histogram, It's Your Friend!.

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Why I need to know about DOF (Depth of Field)?

Understanding depth of field and having the knowledge to control it is the first step to convert your ordinary photograph into an amazing one.
The aperture setting strongly affects depth of field and is key for the creative control of your image composition.

Choose to let the background and foreground go blur and you've effectively isolated your subject and called specific attention to it. Choose to have the foreground and background sharp, and the subject becomes an element in the overall scene. See sample below.

The key to using depth-of-field to isolate or blend your subject is lens aperture.

No matter what kind of photography you enjoy to do – landscape, commercial, portrait, food, architectural, wedding photography, people, wild life - the depth of field is one of the most important concept that a good photographer should understand and known how to manage.

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Digital Photography Tips

This is the second post in this “How to craft better photos” Series. I will be talking about the basic concepts of photography exposure histogram.  Follow this link to read the first article titled Understanding Exposure Will Help to Improve Your Photo.

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                                                              Taking proper exposed images matter!

Using the histogram in you camera’s image viewing LCD will help you to take a much higher number of well exposed images.  I will cover this feature with enough detail to give you a working knowledge of how to use the histogram to make better pictures.   I do not pretend to cover everything on histogram but I will present enough knowledge to improve your proper exposure technique immediately.

Human Eye and the Camera Sensor

Human Eye vs Digital Camera Sensors

The human eye can cope with an enormous brightness range.  For example on a bright day we can see in to the deep shadows cast by a tree at the same time we can see details in the lightest part of a white cloud directly over the tree and lit by the sun.

The camera’s sensor can only capture a more limited brightness range in a single exposure.  If you want to record the subtle detail in the lightest part of the cloud then detail will be lost in the shadow areas of the image. Similarly if you set exposure to reveal full detail of subjects in shade then you will end up with "washed out" highlight detail where light tones become featureless white.

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Digital Photography Tips

Understanding exposure makes you a better photographer

This is my first post in this “How to craft better photos” Series. I will be talking about the basic concepts of photography exposure.

                              Taking proper exposed images matter!


Today the digital cameraDSLviews can handle exposure very well in automatic and semi automatic modes, but understanding exposure properly can certainly help to improve your photography.

Let's start by thinking about what's happening with light when you take a picture. The light passes through the lens and then through the shutter before it arrives at either a sensor or a frame of film. The camera's lens and shutter control how much light gets to that sensor or film frame.

 

Exposure is all about how much light go into the camera sensor or film.


Too much light, and your photos will be washed out, too little and they will be too dark.

 

Overexposed Image Proper Exposed Image Underexposed Image
Over Exposed Image Sample - Boricua Feliz Proper Exposed Image Sample - Boricua Feliz Under Exposed Image Sample - Boricua Feliz

 

5 Reason to have control of the exposure

  1. If you overexposed (too much light) you will end up with blown highlights and you can never recover details in these areas of the image, never.
  2. If you underexposed (too little light) same happens, there is not data recorded in dark areas and you can never recover them.
  3. Poorly exposed images have low contrast
  4. Poorly exposed images don’t have good color saturation
  5. Light meter in cameras can be (and the often are) fooled by certain lighting conditions

Therefore, is a most to have an understanding of exposure before you press the shutter!

What Affects Exposure?

There are three things related to exposure.  The relationship between aperture, shutter speed and ISO is what make an exposure. Those three are closely connected, and that connection is the basis of every photograph.
Two of those involve how much light comes into the camera; the third is the sensitiveness to light of the film or sensor of your camera.

  • The shutter Speed
  • The Aperture
  • The ISO (light sensitivity)

Understanding Exposure – The Shutter Speed

To understand exposure , you need to understand shutter speed. The camera’s shutter controls  how long the the light coming through the lens gets to hit the media; film or sensor.

The shutter works as your eyelid.  It is normally closed, when you press the shutter , it open for a fraction of second to allow the light to get the media. Controlling the shutter speed means controlling the time the eyelid is opened.

The longer it stays open, the more light enters. If it’s open for too long, the photo will be overexposed. Not open for long enough and your photo will be too dark.

 

Understanding Exposure – The Aperture

The other part of the exposure equation is the aperture.  What the heel is that? aperture

To understand exposure you need to know what the aperture is and  does.  As with shutter speed, the aperture is also a way of controlling how much light enters the camera.

The aperture is an adjustable hole in the lens. It can open to allow more light in. Or it can close to become just a tiny hole, stopping so much light from entering.  It behaves as your eye iris.

 

So aperture and shutter speed work together to create an exposure. There is just one combination between the shutter speed and the aperture that will resulted in a proper exposed image.

Therefore, if you have a slow shutter speed (to let more light in) you have to close the aperture to compensate. And visa versa – if you have a fast shutter speed (letting less light in) you have to open the aperture to allow in more light to compensate.

 

Understanding Exposure – The ISO

There is onecamera sensor more key element in the equation, ISO which refers to the light sensitivity of the sensor (or film) inside the camera.  The lower the ISO, 100 for example the more light we need to get the proper exposure.  The higher the number, let say 800, less light we need.

Since we need less light with a higher ISO, you might be tempted to use a high ISO all the time, Be Careful, as we go up in sensitivity, we tend to lose color saturation and gain noise, which gives images a grainy look (speckling effect on photos).

 

So..

So it's our job to manage exposure to get the sharp, clear photos we want. The key thing to remember is that the three elements—aperture, shutter speed and ISO—are always linked. For photographers it's a balancing act, and so we're always adjusting the shutter speed and aperture for the right exposure and the effect we want.

Of course, you can bypass all of the above simply by setting your camera for auto or program mode and letting the built-in computer do the work. Still, understanding the relationship of aperture, shutter speed and ISO will give you a greater understanding of how to take control of your photography.

Remember :

Shutter Speed + Aperture + ISO = Proper Exposure

 

Homework

Homework for this lesson is fairly simple. Set your camera to manual mode.  Keeping always the same ISO setting. Take a photo.  Then, change one of the elements, aperture for example to a higher setting, and take a photo.

How the exposure change? It is lighter or darker?

Now change the other element (shutter speed in this case) to compensate the first element changed - to a faster shutter speed.  Now you get same exposure than the first taken photo.  Why? Because you set the relationship between aperture and shutter speed to the same as the original photo.

I will love to see comments about your experiences…    You may share them with us in the comment area.    You may subscribe to our RSS too!

 

Read the Full Series

This post is part of a series on How to craft better photos” . It will be all the more powerful if you taken in context of the full series which looks at 5 points of how to improve your photography and do it in a creative way.  Start reading this series here.

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Digital Photography Tips

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 "7 Pasos Para Fotos Perfectas!"
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Descubra los 7 pasos que necesita seguir para que sus fotos luzcan perfectas y profesionales.
Su lanzamiento será en Octubre 2010
Con este folleto usted aprenderá a;

  • Como tomar fotos de colores impactantes
  • Como tomar fotos brillantes y definidas
  • Como tomar fotos familiares perfectas
  • A eliminar el color verde y naranja de sus fotos
    
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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.
© Copyright 2010 by Alicea's Photo Gallery

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