Digital Camera reviews - Best Reflex Camera

October 9th, 2008

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Buy A Cheap And Low Price Digital Camera

There are a number of great websites that are dedicated to helping you find a cheap digital camera. Some of these can help you save a lot of money on your camera purchases. A lot of these websites will take the effort out of finding a cheap digital camera as they search the Internet and physical stores for the best deals for you.

Buy a cheap and low price digital cameras

There are so many sales, bargains, coupons and deals available to enable you to get a truly cheap digital camera that it can seem impossible to choose between them so it is important to find a website that gives reviews on the products as well as the vendors themselves. A cheap digital camera may not be such a good deal if it turns out that the vendor has poor levels of customer service.

Obviously, a lot of the cheap digital camera deals are constantly changing and having the latest information can be the difference between getting the camera you want and having to pay more because the offer has ended. Many websites have a number of services to help get the information about current cheap digital camera offers to you as fast as possible. You can choose to have specific cheap digital camera deals sent to you via email, mobile phone or palm text message or RSS feed amongst others. These alerts can be customized so that you can choose to only receive cheap

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Written by chalacuna on October 9th, 2008 with no comments.
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Book Review: Take Your Best Shot By Tim Grey

Written by T. Michael Testi

As with a lot of books, Take Your Best Shot is one that has been years in the making. While working with the nature photographer George Lepp, Tim Grey started a quarterly newsletter called "Digital Darkroom Quarterly." Over time he kept getting questions via email asking questions on digital photography, and many times these questions were the same or similar questions. So instead of just responding to these questions, in 2001, he started the Digital Darkroom Questions (DDQ) email newsletter. To this day, these questions still go strong. Tim Grey's latest book, Take Your Best Shot, was developed from these questions. The book is 252 pages in length and is divided into 10 chapters.

Chapter 1, "Digital Fundamentals," begins with question topics that will help give you a strong foundation in digital photography and help shorten your learning curve. The goal here is that even if you have the basics down, by reviewing some of these topics you will even pick up a point or two. Topics covered here include the debate between film and digital, dynamic range, ISO, resolution, RAW capture, and lens problems such as chromatic aberration.

Chapter 2, "Digital Cameras and Tools," examines the wild and wonderful world of ever expanding digital technology. In the days of film cameras, things did not change that frequently, but with the advent of digital, things don't stay the same for very long. Now you have many choices that constantly change.

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Written by T. Michael Testi on October 9th, 2008 with no comments.
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“On Top Of The World”

"On Top Of The World"
© David A. Ziser


Here is another one of my "sunny day" wedding portraits from this past weekend's wedding. Our vantage point gave a great view of the Kentucky side of the Ohio River. I positioned the bride and groom between to two bridges you see in the background. I had the choice of a low camera angle which would feature the sky more in the composition, but that obstructed the bridges from the view. Since the rooftop view was important to my clients, I choose the higher camera vantage point for this shot showing the bridges. They were standing directly in the sun which I blocked with a large translucent panel. That gave me the soft light on there faces upon which I could add the "loop-light" illumination from my off-camera flash which was coming in from the right side. I filled the facial shadows with my on-camera flash firing too, but with the power reduced by 1 2/3's stops so that it did not overpower the off-camera flash. I thought we pulled off a pretty cool shot. To see the entire set up, hit the "Read more..." link below. Camera specs; Canon 40D fitted with 10-22mm lens at 10mm, F 20 @ 1/250 second, ISO 200. Enjoy! -David

Here is how the shot was set up. -David



Written by Carlos on October 9th, 2008 with no comments.
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Business Day Thursday: Wait For The Business To Come To You Or Make The Business Come To You - A 5 Step Strategy To Success

Good Morning Everybody,

"The world is not the same as we once new it, or stronger still - the world we once knew no longer exists!"


That was one of the mantras espoused at the business seminar I attended yesterday for 4 hours. It really got me thinking. I've been teaching how to run a successful business for over 25 years and it is time for me examine my conscience too about the world I knew and the world we are doing business in today. Is it the same? The quick answer is HECK NO!!!

More gloom and doom..... We just returned from our KPPA seminar in Louisville this past weekend. I heard it again - "I did 35 weddings last year, this year I'm doing 12 and next year I only have a couple of weddings booked." "Did you hear (a comment made about another prominent photog in the area) that______ is driving a limo three days a week because his business has dropped off so much?" These stories are shocking to me when I hear how many photogs businesses have made such a drastic change in such a short time and are down so much.
As I said, it got me thinking. How many referrals have I gotten from my vendor buddies recently. The reality was NONE. OK, where is the problem here? Time to rethink. Have I gone out and contacted with them recently? My answer would
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Written by Carlos on October 9th, 2008 with no comments.
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