How to take beautiful photographs for your blog with an ordinary camera

I am an ordinary photographer, with an ordinary old Nikon.  Nothing special. No fancy pancy.  People say to me  “How do you do that?  What kind of camera do you have?”  So I thought I would jot down a few of the things I have learnt about taking photographs.

I don’t want to sound arrogant. I am still learning. Some really good  photographers read these pages.  So please join in. Sometimes I think it is a good thing to share ordinary  information without all that techy stuff, that I don’t understand anyway.   I am going to use old shots from a holiday years ago, merely to entertain your eye on the way, so we do not get distracted by the Farm Animals. Sometimes a picture helps. 

Taking a good shot for your pages is very simple if you THINK as you shoot. I am not talking about Food Photography – that is not my forte. All I know about Food Photography is to have natural light, a pale background, declutter, a prop, and a TriPod.  I am still learning that too.  What I want to talk about today is the photos of your streets, and your flowers, your animals, your mountains, your people  and your stuff. You are surrounded in some wonderful, individual, very special images that only you can see.  You will interpret them in your own particular way. So don’t be afraid.  Come on out of the Camera Closet. Come out and Play.

You do not need a fancy camera to create a good photograph.    You don’t particularly need Photo Shop either though it is a useful tool. Even though something like Photo Shop will make a good shot better, and a fantastic shot awesome,  a crap shot will still be crap.  So decide your level of excellence and delete the rest.  I prefer to rely on using the camera to produce a good image to begin with.  So lets take a minute and look at what you are going to shoot.  Ask yourself what you want me to SEE.   Then think: Composition. Contrast. Clarity.   Celi’s Three C’s. This will always give you one great shot per set.

Study other peoples photographs. I personally like  to study  newspaper photographs, because these are very seldom taken in a studio. They use available light.  They have limited time. There is very little dressing done to the location.  And their images have to tell a story.  So study them, get a pen and create thirds -horizontally and vertically and look at that photographers choices.  Look at the focal points.  Look at the light.  Where was the photographer when he took the shot.

Now think about Celi’s Three C’s.

1. Composition.

Divide your composition  into those three sections vertically and horizontally. You will have four lines and nine boxes. Think about where you want your subject to sit in your grid.  Your focal point needs the best light and the focus.   Your viewers enjoy symmetry. I tend to compose with the subject in the left third looking into plenty of space or the right third looking back.  You may prefer a central image like the one above. But make a decision.

Think about different levels. I almost never take a shot standing, unless I am standing on top of something to get height. When you are buying shoes you stand in front of a low mirror –  looking down on them does not give you the best image.  So crouch, or lie down, or climb a tree.  Or do all three. Lean to the side.  Please stay out of the gutter and try to stay clean, unless you simply must get filthy in pursuit of the perfect shot. And do not stand on the car if your husband is watching.

Look at the background. Ensure that your horizon and the lamp post are both absolutely straight.  Use your grid for this. Be fastidious about this.  Always give me one clear line to hang the image on. Unless you really want everything to be mis-aligned or on a diagonal. I was trained by Dad on the beach, taking shots of the sea. Out here on the prairies it is the same.  Any tilt in that horizon ruins a shot.  A tiny angle on a roofline kills it.  The line of the ceiling, or a fence or a kitchen wall. Even a tree. So straighten that horizon before you shoot. Now look and make sure there is not some stray object in your background. Check all four corners as you go. My mother said all four corners should be different in her paintings.  My father would say get all that rubbish out of the shot.

Get close to your subject.  Allow your subject  and his environment to fill your screen. If you are unable to crop your image later then crop with composition.  Maybe only a quarter of the image is more dramatic. Get closer as long as you do not compromise your clarity. Keep thinking, take risks and make decisions.

Use foreground. Sometimes shooting a landscape with something in the foreground like long grass or a tree or the corner of a building immediately creates depth.

Allow room for the eye. My mother was an artist. In fact when we were little she set up a child’s play pen, and sat Herself in the playpen so she could paint while we played, without anyone knocking into the easel. Anyway she told me when she painted a landscape that she always gave the viewer a gap, or winding path or open gate so that their eye could walk into the scene and rest there.

2. Contrast

It is all about the light. Back lit is dramatic.  Side lit is nostalgic. Heavy white cloud adds depth to colour.  Light does all kinds of fabulous stuff. So look at your light source, usually the sun and use it to your advantage.  Look up, Look across and Look down!!  Study your light.  Remember that light reflects. How will you capture it.

You want a contrast between light and dark, soft and strong.  I know this sounds simplistic but it is a major decision.  Focus on the area that you want to be clear and well exposed. Allowing the rest to go darker or lighter.  With a little snappy snap camera you still have choices.

Natural light is always going to be better. Avoid a flash unless you can set it on low or direct it into a reflector.  A flash flattens your subject. I hate flashes.  I want to see your light.  You all know that I prefer late afternoon or early morning.  Lovely low winter light is my favourite especially with animals and faces.

Position yourself to take advantage of your light. Once again. Look up, look across, look down. Where should you be to take advantage of the light.  “You’re in my light!” was heard shouted frequently in the big house at the beach where I grew up. If you are inside in low light, secure the camera so it is rigid (tripod, pile of books, whatever)and adjust your settings for low light.  But do not stand in the light! My Dad told me where there is light there is a photograph. 

3.  Clarity. Use a tripod or as I often do,  lean your camera on the camera bag, or on a bucket, or on the side of a door, a wall, fence or the car (as long as the motor is not running) or hay bale or fence post, even a shoulder if you have a spare one lounging about.  Your camera may have a stabiliser but nothing is better than tight and still.

Ensure that the subject is sharp. If it is an animal or person focus on the eyes.  Wait to get your focus before you fully depress your shutter.

Release the shutter and wait for a second.  Look at what you have done. Do you need to do that again? Many shots are ruined or lost by depressing the button then running or turning.  Make sure your work is in focus  and the best you can get before you move to the next shot. (The joys of digital). Slow down.  Later, look at your shots  with a tough eye and delete, delete, delete.  Don’t waste your time on rubbish, go get the good stuff. Do it again.

I was talking to a jazz player once. I asked him how he learnt how to play this jazz with such accomplishment. He said he studied classical music in Paris (somewhere posh) and  once he knew that he had a thorough understanding of the principles of good music (and this took years), he took some of  the rules and broke them, creating his own form of jazz. But he said he could not have broken the rules in the right places without knowing the music first.

So look up, look across and look down.  Practice seeing.  And keep shooting until you start achieving your objectives.  Which means you have to think about your shot and choose an objective. 

Fear is your only enemy.  Sometimes you just have to walk around the corner, surprise a surprise subject and shoot the hell out of it and hope you get one good shot.  See above!!

So, go and buy a newspaper, find a shot you love, draw the grid and study it using Celi’s three C’s.  Then get that little old camera out of the drawer and start shooting. Then shoot some more. Every time we get something wrong, it helps us work out how to get it right next time.  So take good note of the failures, they are important learning. Then do it again.  Then show me.

And remember you do not need a fancy camera.  You just need you,  any camera and a Plan.

c

135 responses to “How to take beautiful photographs for your blog with an ordinary camera”

  1. My first response was “are you SURE you’re not a professional photographer?” But then with your true artist’s eye, you’re a better photographer than some “professionals” anyway, in my opinion. I live with a photographer, but am stubbornly trying to learn more on my own and this was so helpful, thank you! Any suggestions about how to do simple but good shots of food at night with natural or available light? It’s the bane of my shooting.

      • use anything that you can rest your camera on.. a pile of books is my personal favourite, or the other day the rim of a milk jug, anything is better than hand held! c

    • I hope that some of the food pros chime in with suggestions but here are mine. God help us all! 1. Take shots of the food as you go, in case it is too dark by the time you are finished cooking. 2. Sometimes I place the plate of food into my clean white enamel kitchen sink (lots of reflection plus a ready made white background), right under a kitchen window and back fill with an LED desk light ( I think it is LED i will check) , making use of the white reflective surfaces and use the tripod. Turn off the kitchen lights they make everything yellow. 3. If possible have two light sources. (at least one natural) 4. Shoot your lunch. Rosemary from Cooking in Sens does this with beautiful results. 5. Roger from Food Photography and France (see my blog roll) has a white tea trolley affair that he sets with his gorgeous props and drags around the house until he finds the best light. 6. If you have a flash you can shoot the flash off a white ceiling, but I don’t know whether that will work with food. 7. We need to ask Greg from Rufus’ he is consistent with his shots and I think they work in the evening too! Hope some of this helps, If I think of anything else I shall zoom over and let you know. c

      • Actually yes, this gives me some ideas and thank you so much for these suggestions, and I shall check out these folks’ shots, too. It’s always dark when I cook during the week this time of year, but I love the idea of a trolley or some such set up. 🙂

      • It’s hard when you’ve said so much, but to put things in perspective, if you are photographing your dinner, then you are really looking to produce a good snapshot – in focus, with good natural lighting and well composed.

        Professionally, you’d spend all day on one picture and you’d have several crates of food to go through for a perfect pineapple, fish, sausage or whatever. You might prepare that food several times before you are happy with the shot and it’s unlikely that it would be eaten.

        So I would say, try to take some good pictures, but don’t sacrifice the food unless someone else is paying for it 😉

  2. This is simple to understand, that’s what I love about your writing style. It’s just REAL! Thank you, and I’m excited to share your tips with my daughter in law who is aspiring to capture some great shots.

    • Hullo patty and welcome. tell your daughter in law good luck and keep her eyes wide open, i am always here if she has any questions that i am able to help her with. And i love that you are reading!! c

  3. Heartfelt gratitude is winging its way to you for this. I did know a lot of it, but often forget in the heat of the moment. My besetting sin is wonky angles – the horizon or whatever looks straight to me at the time, but I have astigmatism, so when I open the pic on the computer I have to do lots of jiggling and cropping to get it straight. One thing my camera doesn’t have is a viewfinder – just that big window on the back. I’m never sure what’ll be included and what left out!

    • Hmm, I also prefer a viewfinder, I have turned off the screen at the back of mine, and only use it for reviewing, my camera really is that old. Well i am glad that i could jog your memory on a few of those things, have fun! c

  4. You have revealed my worst habit… downloading and failing to delete the cr@p! I totally wastes disk space! Hm… if I start now, doing a folder a day, I may be able to finish by this time in say, the year 2030? I will, of course, have be very diligent. ~ Lynda

  5. Couldn’t have said it better, Cecilia…great advice!! Agree with everything. 🙂 I took a few photo classes back in high school and college, and though I don’t consider myself an expert in the least bit, they definitely helped. Your photos are always lovely. 🙂 x

  6. I’ve always loved your photos..and now I know why! I’m coming back to this post again and again to absorb all this great info. I knew you had an eye for taking photos, but all the rest I had no idea! I need ALOT of help in the photography area – my biggest challenge and hope to really work on it this year. Thanks so much for sharing this!! You’re a love!!

  7. Thanks so much for this. Aside from lots of great thoughts on how to compose good photos, it is a very motivating post. I struggle with photos all the time because I love good pictures, but am crap at taking them. How nice that I can come here not only to look at yours but also to learn how to improve mine!

    • Hi Siobhan, every time you see a shot you really like have a good look at it and see what you like it, sometimes that helps crystallise your own style. c

  8. Lots of good advice….I just wish I could remember it all when I’m taking a photo! I like your backlit donkey and I agree with the jazz player that you have to know the rules before you break them.

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