Newsletter from Kim Westerskov. Newsletter #29 July-August 2014

Similar documents
Newsletter from Kim Westerskov. Newsletter #21- April 2013

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov. Newsletter #26 February 2014

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov. Newsletter #22- May2013

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov. Newsletter #20 March 2013

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov

2015 Calendar of Events. Workshops

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov

Autumn. Get Ready For Autumn. Technique eguide. Get Ready For

CREATE BETTER WORK & SELL MORE THROUGH PRE-SESSION CONSULTATION

The Art of Nature Photography

Moving Beyond Automatic Mode

mastering manual week one

Spring Semester 2019

Buxton & District U3A Digital Photography Beginners Group

10 TOP TIPS TO INSTANTLY IMPROVE YOUR NATURE PHOTOS

Digital camera modes explained: choose the best shooting mode for your subject

OCEANSIDE SHUTTERBUG NEWSLETTER

Get the Shot! Photography + Instagram Workshop September 21, 2013 BlogPodium. Saturday, 21 September, 13

Capturing Realistic HDR Images. Dave Curtin Nassau County Camera Club February 24 th, 2016

Photoshop Master Class Tutorials for PC and Mac

Capturing God s Creation Through The Lens. Session 3 From Snap Shots to Great Shots January 20, 2013 Donald Jin

Acadia National Park Autumn Adventure

Best Camera Settings For Outdoor Group Photos

TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter One Camera Settings Image size and quality, JPG vs RAW, a word about memory cards, and color space.

About Me. Randolph Community College Two year degree in Portrait and Studio Management Portraits, Wedding, Events Landscapes with boats - favorite

Table of Contents. 1.Choosing your Camera. 2. Understanding your Camera Which Camera DSLR vs Compact...8

01 High-Key SIMPLE SOULFUL SENSATIONAL CHILDRENS PHOTOGRAPHY. Black-and-White Children s Portraiture

PHIL MORGAN PHOTOGRAPHY

Chicago Photography. One-year Certificate Program. Classes:

Aperture Explained. helping you to better understand your digital SLR camera SLR PHOTOGRAPHY GUIDE

Autofocus Problems The Camera Lens

NOVEMBER 22, that's going to make the difference between photos you'll want to share and those you'll probably delete.

Newsletter from Kim Westerskov

PHOTOGRAPHY COURSES 2018

A BEGINNER S GUIDE TO PHOTOGRAPHY CHEATSHEET

If you re like most Americans (indeed, like most residents

Photographer s Handbook. Event Edition

THE INTERVIEW SUCCESS BLUEPRINT

Pictures are visual poems, the greatest of which are those that move us the way the photographer was moved when he clicked the shutter.

Fireworks. Colin White 2016

Basic Camera Craft. Roy Killen, GMAPS, EFIAP, MPSA. (c) 2016 Roy Killen Basic Camera Craft, Page 1

Tips for Digital Photographers

Image Manipulation Unit 34. Chantelle Bennett

DUNKELD DIGITAL LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY

What This Course Will Teach You

Part One In The Camera A Beginner s Guide to Improving Your Photography by John Strung

BEC Practice Test Vantage

Love Your Camera (Introduction to D-SLR)

Blarney Photography Club

Why Prime NIKKORs Are Now My Prime Traveling Companions

Digital Art & Design I-IV Mr. Baker Welcome new and returning photography students! For those of you who are new to the program, I m

Want Better Landscape Photos? First Check Your Definition of "Landscape"

Improving Your Basic Photography

capture food & drink Capture Your Holidays with Katrina Kennedy It wouldn t be the holidays without yummy cookies,

AF Area Mode. Face Priority

The Photography West Mentor/Mentee ( M & M) Program MENTOR APPLICATION 2019

Photography Help Sheets

Nicole Young interview 20 March 2015 INTERVIEW. Nicolesy on Life Adventuring and Shopify for Photographers

Failure is a crucial part of the creative process. Authentic success arrives only after we have mastered failing better. George Bernard Shaw

Understanding Exposure, 3rd Edition: How To Shoot Great Photographs With Any Camera PDF

Table of Contents. Page

By photographer and photo dealer, Bruce Pottinger (Hon FAIPP AIPP), L&P Digital Photographic, Australia

Photo Basics By Jack Vanden Heuvel

5 TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR WILDLIFE

Step 1: taking the perfect shot

HDR is a process for increasing the range of tonal values beyond what a single frame (either film or digital) can produce.

1. This paper contains 45 multiple-choice-questions (MCQ) in 6 pages. 2. All questions carry equal marks. 3. You can take 1 hour for answering.

The Basic SLR

Introduction to camera usage. The universal manual controls of most cameras

P & C. Contents. SS Rip (formerly HMAS Whyalla) moored at Sorrento Pier, c. 1965

This is Jack, Leave a Message, Alright?

Blue Hour and HDR Tutorial by John Strung

capture outside Capture Your Holidays with Katrina Kennedy It s cold outside! I m sitting At the end of this lesson you will be able to:

THE CAMERA CASE. September Letter from the President by Walter Harrington. 1 Nashoba Valley Photo Club

Camera Triage. Portrait Mode

Writing Train with Yvonne Cullen:

21 Go-to Shooting Settings

In Focus. Newsletter of the Morgan Hill Photography Club. RED WHITE & BLUE is the Flickr theme for JULY.

Travel & Landscapes. Introduction

2017 UCLA Summer Art Institute. Photography. Session A: July 10th through 21st. Instructor: Bjarne Bare

NIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY FOR BROOKGREEN GARDENS FIELD TRIP AND HOLIDAY PHOTOS BY JACK EYLER

In the past year or so, just about everyone I know has gone out and purchased

FOOTHILLS PHOTOGRAPHY GROUP

Mastering Y our Your Digital Camera

Produce stunning. Pro photographer Chris Humphreys guides you through HDR and how to create captivating natural-looking images

So far, I have discussed setting up the camera for

The Essential Guide To EOS Flash Learn to understand EOS flash and Speedlite flashguns. Written by Nina Bailey

Writing Prompts. for grades 2-4. #18 Best/Worst Day Ever #19 Celebration #20 Scared

DSLR Essentials: Class Notes

CONTENTS. FORGET THE RULES Forget: The Rule of Thirds Forget: Focus Forget: Exposure Forget: Framing Forget: Lighting Forget: Active Space

Have you ever had one of the following situations happen in your photography endeavors?

Green Cay Nature Center and Wetlands 8 th Annual Photo Contest Sponsored by the Friends of Green Cay Nature Center, Inc.

MONDAY (Week 1) PM

1 / 9

Photography Basics. Innovative Storytelling

Camera Exposure Modes

C a b l e R e l e a s e

Transcription:

Please forward this to anyone you think might be interested and, of course, if you d prefer not to receive future newsletters from Kim, please just Reply with Unsubscribe please as the subject. Thanks Newsletter from Kim Westerskov Email: kimsworkshops@gmail.com Web: www.kimwesterskov.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/kim.westerskov 20 Greerton Road, Tauranga 3112, New Zealand Phone 07-578-5138 Newsletter #29 July-August 2014 1. EARLY THIS MORNING 2. PHOTOS OF OUR WORKSHOPS 3. QUOTE OF THE MONTH 4. KIM TIPS PHOTO COMPETITIONS 5. GREAT PHOTOGRAPHY WEEKEND 6. PHOTOGRAPHY 101: THE BASICS AND BEYOND 7. IN-DEPTH PHOTO EVALUATION EVENINGS 8 KIM S PHOTOS & COFFEE EVENINGS 9. PRIVATE TUITION This newsletter goes out to many photographers in New Zealand and overseas - and to anybody who asks to go onto the mailing list. If you know anybody who would like to be on the mailing list, please get them to email me. It s free and they can unsubscribe at any time, of course.

1. EARLY THIS MORNING Tauranga and surrounding countryside early this morning. I d been up all night photographing stars in the clear night air, and then the eastern sky lightened. The stars of Orion and Matariki [the Pleiades] faded as another glorious day arrived

2. PHOTOS OF OUR WORKSHOPS Ever wondered what Kim s photo workshops look like? Here s some photos taken by Gerard Pollock from the last workshop a few weeks ago [thanks Gerard], and also from the Nature Photography Weekend last year. 3. QUOTE OF THE MONTH [The workshop] gave me inspiration to keep going with the realisation that great photography is within my reach after all and not an unobtainable dream! Hazel Ellis [thanks Hazel ]

4. KIM TIPS PHOTO COMPETITIONS Last week I drove to Auckland to join James Frankham, Arno Gasteiger and Andris Apse to judge the 2014 New Zealand Geographic Photographer of the Year competition. So it seems a good time to share some thoughts about entering photo competitions. First of all do you need to enter photo competitions? Of course not. Photo competitions are not for everyone, but they can be a useful way of sharpening your photo skills and in particular your editing skills choosing your very best photos often not as easy as it sounds. Photo competitions can even help launch careers in photography, and they did so for me. My first thought would be to enter only what I call honourable photo competitions, those which respect your copyright and which aren t just crowdsourcing free photos they can use, often taking your copyright in the process. So read the Terms and Conditions to see what they say about copyright. If they say something like Copyright remains with the photographer and we will only use your photos in relation to the competition then that s an honourable competition. Maybe watch the video What Makes a Winning Shot? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zoynjjtngp0 Read the rules and follow them - you d be surprised how many people don t. If the rules say [as they do in the case of the NZ Geographic competition] Images of captive animals, restrained animals and animals being exploited for profit will not be considered, then don t enter photos of your pet dog or cat - or sheep, cows, horses, lions, tigers, meerkats, giraffes etc. For some reason, people keep entering such photos in the NZ Geographic competition. Photographers, even professionals, are often hopeless at knowing which are their best photos. They know which ones are closest to their own hearts [often the ones that were the hardest to get], but other people don t see the backstory - they see just the photo. So ask other photographers which photos are your best ones. Ask me if I m around. Or show them at our Tuesday night Photos & Coffee evenings. Or at your local photo society. Keep in mind the standard rules of photography: unless it s a deliberately blurred image, then the photo has to be sharp [or at least the focal point often the eye or eyes needs to be sharp], and also well composed, well exposed etc. Great light definitely helps. Great light on an ordinary subject will often lift it well above photos of great subjects in dull light. Unless it s a competition that encourages strong Photoshop manipulations, then don t overdo saturation, vignetting, HDR etc. There s some good tips here: http://www.nzgeographic.co.nz/pro-tips

5. GREAT PHOTOGRAPHY WEEKEND September, October, or November 2014 It s not often that you get to choose when your next photo workshop will be run, but here s your chance. I know that some of you are keen on the idea of a full weekend workshop later this year, somewhere between September and November. Every full-weekend workshop I ve run to date has been a Nature Photography Weekend, concentrating on nature photography: wildlife, landscapes, seascapes, forests, waterfalls, flowers etc. This year I m planning to run a weekend with a much wider scope, including not only all the nature photography topics, but also people [portraits, weddings, candids], travel photography, photo basics, digital workflow, Photoshop/Lightroom, etc. Most of the photographers coming to my workshops come from the Bay of Plenty, but we also get people travelling from Whangarei, Kerikeri, Taranaki, Wellington, Hawkes Bay and other places around the North Island [bless them!]. There s three good motels within 6 minutes walk of our workshop studio here and, well, Tauranga is not too bad a place to visit anyway. So if this idea appeals to you, let me know, and if the weekend of your choice is free for me and you re the first in - we ll run it that weekend. Good idea? 6. PHOTOGRAPHY 101 THE BASICS & BEYOND Half-day workshop Saturday 9 th August 9.00am - 1.00pm or full day workshop on Sunday 10th August EarlyBird discount deadline extended Everything you need to get going or all the stuff you should have learned but have got by without so far. I find that many amateur photographers have a reasonable understanding of some of what they need to know usually enough to get good photos occasionally but that they also have big holes in their knowledge stuff they really should know, but haven t learnt yet. The trouble is that every photographer has different holes the things that are holding them back. These two workshops will fill those holes and get you up to speed, technically - and refresh those bits you already know. You won t get any university credits for attending this, but you will come away with a much better understanding of your camera and photography in general. This could be your big step up! You ll walk out the door with useful tips, hand-outs, inspiration, and a much better understanding of how to get better photos! I d recommend these workshops for beginning photographers and intermediate amateurs. An ideal way of really getting to grips with the technical stuff [and the other stuff you need to know] would be to come to the half day workshop on Saturday, and then come to the Sunday workshop as well. Coming on the Sunday would consolidate beautifully what you learned on the Saturday, and then add a lot more knowledge. To encourage you to take advantage of this, there s a very special price if you come to both a price not much more than the cost of coming to the Sunday workshop alone.

If the following words frighten you or make your eyes and mind glaze over [don t worry I know the feeling] these workshops are for you: Depth of field & bokeh Exposure compensation Aperture or f-stop Shutter speed ISO Colour balance Matrix metering Digital workflow Backing up & archiving Shooting modes Aperture Priority Histograms etc. etc. You don t need a university-level understanding of the above list to get better photos, but the more you can incorporate these concepts into your photography, the better your photos will be. Quite simple really. We will cover the main things holding you back and how to deal with them: also when and how to use wide angle, normal and telephoto lenses - and much more. You will walk out the door with a printed hand-out summary and a two printed checklists: Checklist for Critiquing your own Photos, and Elements of Good Photos. Cost [EarlyBird deadlines have been extended to 3 rd August] Saturday 9 th August: Full workshop fee $140 - or $120 for Early Birds [if you register before 3 August ]. Fulltime students $70. The course fee includes tuition, hand-outs, and morning tea. Sunday 10 th August: Full course fee [which includes workshop, follow-up, hand-outs, and Vivienne s yummy catering] $295 [or $245 Early Bird if booked by 3rd August]. Fulltime students $150. Saturday and Sunday combined. Full course fee [which includes workshop, follow-up, hand-outs, and Vivienne s yummy catering] $325 [or $275 Early Bird if booked by 3rd August]. Fulltime students $165. 7. IN-DEPTH PHOTO EVALUATION EVENINGS Last year a photographer asked me if I would run in-depth photo evaluation evenings somewhat like the Tuesday Photos & Coffee evenings that I run every month, but with real in-depth photo critiques. We run these every month now, and all are enjoyable and definitely in-depth. In-depth Photo Evaluation Evenings run on the THIRD THURSDAY OF EVERY MONTH except December. As the person who suggested these evenings said, both the frequency of the meetings, and seeing what others are photographing, should be motivating.

What to expect: You bring along some photos, ideally 3-8, that you d like constructively critiqued/evaluated, primarily by me, but also by the others attending. If you bring only 3-4 photos, each photo will be given more time than if you bring a larger number. A good number of the photos will be brought into Photoshop or Lightroom to show different cropping, tidying or processing possibilities - how they could be improved in post-production. So you don t just learn how to make photos you ve already taken look their best you ll also learn many new techniques and approaches for the next time you re out photographing. Cost. $55 for the evening, which runs from 7.00pm to 10.00pm [you re welcome to leave earlier if you need to, in which case we ll look at your photos first]. The next IN-DEPTH evenings will be on Thursday 21st August and Thursday 18th September. 8. KIM S PHOTOS & COFFEE EVENINGS These friendly, relaxed get-togethers are for those of you who have been to any of my workshops or field trips over the last couple of years or are thinking about maybe coming on one. There s no obligation of any kind. We meet on the first Tuesday of each month [every month of the year except January], chat informally about photography, and view some of the recent photos we ve taken. No charge [free]. Supper is served. Please email me if you d like to come and please only book up to one month ahead. They are always fun and friendly. The next two are: Tuesday 5th August starting 7.00pm Tuesday 2nd September starting 7.00pm 9. PRIVATE TUITION I had a great day not so long ago, all day teaching three photographers [in two separate sessions] how to get the best out of their camera, and covering specific techniques they were interested in. A bit later I was teaching two more photographers, concentrating on the best organisation for their photo libraries, their workflow through Lightroom/Photoshop, and photography in general. Topics covered can be anything from photography in general to specific techniques, computer workflow, Lightroom, Photoshop Each photographer determines their own agenda, and so each session is unique. Most tuition so far has been one-on-one, but there s no reason why [if you d like to bring a friend with similar questions] it couldn t be for two people at once [making it much less expensive for each person, of course]. Sessions are typically 2-3 hours. We cover a lot of ground every hour. First 2 hours: $80 per hour, after that $70 per hour [for those of you who qualified on the previous plan, don t worry, your bottom rates still apply nothing has changed for you] What I learned in one evening with Kim would have taken me months to figure out by myself. Overall I found the session extremely worthwhile and consider it excellent value. Raewyn Adams