A Beginner'S Guide To Photography: Cheatsheet
A Beginner'S Guide To Photography: Cheatsheet
A Beginner'S Guide To Photography: Cheatsheet
GUIDE TO
PHOTOGRAPHY
CHEATSHEET
BEGINNER PHOTOGRAPHY
CHEATSHEET
Cameras are complicated. It took me a ton of trial and error before I started
to capture some pretty spectacular images.
This cheatsheet is the reference guide I wish I had when I first started and I
truly hope it will help you in your journey to become a better photographer.
EXPOSURE
Learning how exposure works will help you to take control of your camera
and take better photos. There are three elements that, combined, create an
exposure:
Aperture: the diameter of the hole inside the lens
Shutter speed: filters how much light is allowed to go into the camera
ISO: refers to the sensitivity of the sensor
BEGINNER PHOTOGRAPHY
CHEATSHEET
STEP 1 APERTURE
The aperture is similar to the pupil of your eye: the wider the aperture, the
more light is allowed in and vice versa.
Exposure will be much easier if you can memorize the f/stop scale.
As the aperture widens, the f/number gets lower and more light is allowed
into the camera. This is great for low light but be aware that it’s going to
make the depth of field very shallow – not ideal when taking landscapes.
STEP 1 APERTURE
BEGINNER PHOTOGRAPHY
CHEATSHEET
It all depends on what you’re shooting and how much light you have
available to you.
STEP 3 ISO
Once the light has passed through the aperture and been filtered by the
shutter speed, it reaches the sensor, where we decide upon the ISO.
As you turn the ISO number up, you increase the exposure but, at the same
time, the image quality decreases; there will be more digital noise or “grain”.
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BEGINNER PHOTOGRAPHY
CHEATSHEET
COMPOSITION
It’s important to understand exposure but, if you can’t get to grips with
basic composition, you’ll struggle to take really good photos.
At the same time, you should never blindly follow the ‘rules’; use your new
knowledge to shape your photos into something much more pleasing to the
eye.
The basic premise is that you divide your camera’s frame into thirds and
plant key objects on these lines; the composition will work better.
Photos that are correctly composed using the rule of thirds create depth
and interest, adding an exciting balance between subject(s) and background.
When you understand visual weight, you’ll start to understand how people
look at photos and how you can position certain elements in a frame to
direct the viewers attention to where you want them to look.
RULE 3 TRIANGLES
Triangles are in almost everything we see in one way or another, it’s just a
case of distinguishing and knowing what to do with them.
RULE 4 EYE-LINES
If you take photos of people, you’re taking photos with eye lines. It’s
important to understand the effect that eye lines have on how we view a
photo.
Eye-lines have the ability to focus our attention on a particular part of the
photo, as well as producing tension and other photographic elements.
RULE 5 BALANCE
Balance in a photo affects how we feel when we look at it; it determines
whether the photo is pleasing and harmonious or uncomfortable and
unresolved to look at.
1 METERING MODES
Metering is the process that the camera goes through when it ‘looks’ at a
scene and works out what the exposure should be.
The photo below was taken on spot metering mode but, if you were to take
the same photo using evaluative mode, you would end up with a completely
different exposure.
2 HISTOGRAMS
The histogram shows you a mathematic review of an exposure after the
photo has been taken.
3 SHOOTING MODES
There’s also a lot of misconceptions about which mode to use under which
conditions, as well as a lot of bias towards not using manual mode.
Full-auto
Program
Aperture priority
Shutter speed priority
Manual
When you understand what exactly each mode does, the one that will be
suitable for your situation becomes a lot clearer.
4 DEPTH OF FIELD
When you’re shooting in low light, you invariably have to widen your
aperture to allow enough light into the lens but this has one rather major
side effect: shallow depth of field.
5 WHITE BALANCE
The white balance changes the color cast of the entire photo and is
responsible for the overall warmth. It can determine whether your photo
appears blue or orange: from cold to warm.
6 FOCAL LENGTH
The focal length of your lens essentially determines how ‘zoomed in’ your
photos are; the higher the number, the more zoomed your lens will be.
The focal length affects more than just the ‘zoom’ – it influences the
perspective too.
It is often misunderstood that the focal length is measured from the front or
rear of the lens when, in reality, it’s the distance between the point of
convergence in your lens to the sensor or film in your camera.
7 CROP FACTOR
A lot of you may not realize but, unless you spend about $2000 on your
camera, you’re more than likely to be shooting on a crop sensor. This means
that your sensor is much smaller than professional SLR
cameras which essentially crops the image.
8 POLARIZING FILTERS
Polarizing filters only allow light into the lens from a certain direction. This
results in the removal of glare and reflections from non-metallic objects
such as water and glass, as well as haze from the sky, making for more
naturally saturated colors.
Not only does this look great but it cannot be replicated in post production,
hence it’s so important to understand.
9 SHARP IMAGES
I created a tutorial which will walk you through the 10 step process of
taking professionally sharp photos. It covers everything from choosing the
right aperture and shutter speed, to shooting in RAW.
It’s pretty easy to make just a few small mistakes which will result in less
sharp images, that’s why we cover all ten, in order of importance.
It’s a great introduction to buying better quality lenses and an excellent way
of getting to grips with aperture.
I recommend this lens as the first upgrade for every beginner photographer
to make. It’s easy to use and, for the price, will yield some excellent results.
A BEGINNER’S GUIDE
TO PHOTOGRAPHY
CHEATSHEET