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Creative Close-Ups: Digital Photography Tips & Techniques

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Product Description

The art of macro photography-photographing small objects or super close-ups of small sections of big objects-yields fascinating results, but shooting at this level brings its own set of challenges. Now you can shoot close-ups with confidence and creative flair with this information-packed guide.

Renowned photographer Harold Davis provides pages of field-tested techniques on focus, depth-of-field, exposure-even the appropriate equipment to use for this unique niche of digital photography. The book includes stunning and intriguing examples of his work to illustrate concepts.

Walks you through the basics of macro photography, whether you're capturing an insect, a flower, a close-up of the texture of a pine cone, or more Shows you how to overcome the challenges of this type of photography, such as using the appropriate equipment and how to handle focus, depth of field, and exposure Takes you beyond the fundamentals to help you develop your own creative style Informs and inspires you with the author's own stunning examples of macro photography

Join the vast and beautiful world of small photography with this essential guide.

Amazon Exclusive: Photography Tips and Techniques from Harold Davis

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How to Use Shadows to Enhance Your Composition [image]
How to Use LAB Color for Black and White Effects [image]
Professional Photography Techniques from Harold Davis

Amazon Exclusive: Interview with Award-Winning Photographer Harold Davis

[image] We hear you’ve written some new digital photography titles. What’s the story behind these books?
Wiley Publishing is releasing three new books of mine, Creative Close-Ups: Digital Photography Tips & Techniques , Creative Night: Digital Photography Tips & Techniques , and Creative Composition: Digital Photography Tips & Techniques . My idea with these books was to help people become better photographers by presenting the subject of digital photography in a different way.

What’s different about your approach?
They say that cameras don’t take photos, people do. It’s really true. Someone with a great eye can take masterful photos with an inexpensive camera. Therefore, it is important to know something about photo technique, but the really amazing thing is that we can conceptualize and come up with these bits and bytes that make up a photo—and they can be meaningful to people. I try to help people come up with images that are relevant and meaningful. Cameras and hardware are just tools.

What’s with all the photos in these books?
Well, everyone likes to look at striking images, so one thing my photos do in these books is get people’s attention. However, the photos play another role as well. Each photo in my book is accompanied by the story of how the photo was made and the technical data related to the photo. That way, if you’re not ready to dive into the text itself, you can learn a lot just by browsing the photos.

My feeling is that you truly do learn about photography by looking at photos. It’s much more important to look at images you admire and try and figure out why you like them than it is to read about photography. The photos in these books are baked into the DNA of the teaching strategy. By browsing through the pages, someone can learn a great deal and have an enjoyable visual experience at the same time.

What’s the most important thing that readers can get out of your new books?
I want to inspire readers to be the most creative and best photographers they can be. If you pick up one of my books, I hope you can make use of the technical content and see how the photos relate to some of your own work. The most important thing, however, is to take the ideas in the book, get out there, and do some really peddle-to-the-metal creative photography.

239 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2009

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57 people want to read

About the author

Harold Davis

163 books14 followers
Harold Davis is widely recognized as a leading contemporary photographer and artist. He is also the author of more than 30 books, including Creating HDR Photos: The Complete Guide to High Dynamic Range Photography from Amphoto/Random House and Photographing Flowers: Exploring Macro Worlds with Harold Davis which is published by Focal Press, and has been called "one of the most beautiful books ever created."

Harold Davis believes that advances in the technology and craft of digital photography have created an entirely new art form. Trained as a classical photographer and painter, his photographic images are made using special HDR (High Dynamic Range) capture techniques that extend the range of visual information beyond what the eye can normally see.

Davis creates and processes his images using wide-gamut and alternative digital methods that he has invented. His techniques combine the craft of photography with the skills of a painter.

Photographic adventures and assignments have taken him across the Brooks Range, the northernmost mountains in Alaska. He has photographed the World Trade Towers, hanging out of a small plane, followed in the footsteps of Seneca Ray Stoddard, a 19th-century photographer of the Adirondacks, and created human interest photo stories about the residents of Love Canal, an environmental disaster area.

Harold is well-known for his night photography and experimental ultra-long exposure techniques, use of vibrant, saturated colors in landscape compositions, and beautiful creative floral imagery.

He makes his over-sized original prints on unusual substrates such as pearlized metallic and washi rice papers. Davis states, "I believe that nothing like my prints has ever been seen before. They simply could not have been created until recently. I've been able to innovate in a domain where many techniques and crafts have come together for the first time. My prints are made meticulously, and have a 200-year archival rating for ink and paper if they are handled properly.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
104 reviews2 followers
April 12, 2011
Content-wise, I found this book to be very readable, with a strong dose of common sense and good old fashioned plain talk. The author provides a clear description of how to set up close-up shots, and the equipment needed to carry them off.

The book's physical layout was a different matter altogether.

I wanted to give it a higher mark, but was torn about it. Mostly this was due to a pet-peeve that I have about books on photography that are printed with a disregard for the integrity of the photos included therein. Many of Davis' best shots were spread across two pages, often in divisions that appeared to have no systematic approach to how much of a photo was on one page, and how much would consequently be left to show up on the adjacent leaf. The apparent conservation of space and poor use of the medium was unfair to the reader/viewer. A sad way to exhibit good art.
785 reviews3 followers
March 23, 2020
Interesting read. Outlines tricks and techniques for unusual results in closeup and macro photography.
Profile Image for Ryan Tamm.
13 reviews1 follower
August 4, 2013
To sum this book up, it's about basic photography macro photography techniques, flower photography, and still life. The author touched on some advanced techniques, but not enough to my liking. I guess I was looking more for tips on bug photography which isn't present in this book. There was a lengthy still life section which felt out of place. If you're interested in still life, you'd be better served with a book like "Light Science and Magic". I guess it's an ok book if you're new to photography and don't know anything about macro. For me, I didn't learn very much.
Profile Image for Tom.
12 reviews
August 13, 2012
About 50-50 mix of how-to versus how-I-did-it photos. Some people look at that approach as too much showing off of the author's stuff. I think it breaks up the instructional description with practical application we can use as a start point for our own variations.

I also like the fact that the book promoted the idea that you don't need a lot of expensive equipment, although it is described if you decide to put that kind of resources into it.

45 reviews2 followers
October 16, 2013
Solid intro to close up photography for beginners to intermediate. A good amount of overlap in image content with his Creative Compositions book.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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