My “Day I Left Pennsylvania” led me to some archived website posts (before blogs were invented) I had written many years ago. I’m re-posting them now. Bear in mind that most of the content in this series is over 5 years old. I have left the content more or less intact. I have removed some links and added some others — but that’s it. Enjoy!
I went to the Ohio Institute of Photography & Technology for approximately a year. I think it was 3 semesters total. Took a lot of really neat classes, and a lot of really good (in my opinion) shots. They’ll be up here some day. I also learned a lot of the very precise and interesting aspects of shooting well-composed photos, and I’d like to share them here. The following is some of the very basic rules and laws that are involved in shooting photos of any kind, be it digital or wet, large format or slides. They’re even just good rules of composition period.
The Law of Reciprocity
This is the most fundamental law of photography. It is derived from the basic idea of balance. All things must remain equal in order for the the end result to be satisfactory. The law is:
Exposure = Light x Time
What this is saying, in more simple terms, is that to have an exposure (eg. a “picture”) you must have light, and the light must shine for some amount of time. Make sense? In order to apply this we need to get a little more specific though: Read the rest of this entry »
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