I picked up my first DSLR camera last week, and I’ve been staring at it, completely intimidated, ever since. I have high hopes for this camera. I want to use it to take beautiful pictures for my blog, I want to take gorgeous shots of my daughter, and I want to document our family life as often as possible with something a little better than my trusty iPhone. (Not that there's anything wrong with taking iPhone pics - I love the photos I get with mine. I just wanted something... fancier, I guess.)
But the technical side of photography has always intimidated me. Aperture, ISO, shutter speed — I might as well be trying to learn advanced physics. So I picked up this book hoping it would break down the intimidating task of learning photography in a layman's style. And it did. Unfortunately, only the first fifth or so of the book focuses on the technical details. The rest is about how to compose photos, and how to take great pictures of various subjects. That’s all fine and good, but what I really wanted was to learn to use my camera from a technical perspective, in an easy to learn way. Maybe that's too tall an order. My husband suggests I should take an online course instead. He might be on to something.
Anyway, by the time I finished reading this book, I was ever-so-slightly less confused - but not a whole lot. I still have my camera in auto mode, because any time I try to take it off auto and into manual, I either a) get terrible photos, or b) fiddle with it so much that I miss the shot opportunity altogether. It’s a little easier to mess with settings when shooting a still object (like a card or a painting) - but much more difficult when trying to perfect exposure while capturing a baby’s first taste of banana.