47 Essential Photography Tips for Beginners
Photography is a fun and fascinating process. It’s easier now than ever to get started too. Long gone are the days of needing portable darkrooms or waiting hours to take a single photograph. You can dive in and start snapping away at anything that piques your interest.Since the technical barrier to photography has been drastically reduced, we have much more time to focus on how to take good pictures. We’ve compiled 47 photography tips for beginners that show quick ways to improve photography techniques without overcomplicating things.
There’s lots to take in as a new photographer, so we’ve also broken the list down into five categories. Jump to the sections you need the most help on below. With this in hand, browse our photography rentals to find gear that’ll help boost your skills.
Quick-fire Photography Tips
1
Learn all the rules so you can break them later
Learn as you go — don’t let it prevent you from picking up a camera.
2
Expose and focus first, then frame your shot
This is something that happens more often when you have extreme lights and darks in the same scene.
3
Focus on the eyes
When taking portrait photographs at any aperture, make sure you nail the focus on the eyes. As long as the eyes are in focus, both you and your subject are more likely to consider the picture to be properly shot.
4
Make lots of mistakes, then learn from them
The real value is in turning mistakes into lessons that build your skills. So try a technique or style you haven’t done before and expect to make many mistakes along the way.
5
Perfect the exposure trifecta
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6
Always be ready
Keep your camera on one of the semi-auto or full automatic modes for unexpected pictures before your subject flies, drives, or runs away. You can always switch back to your preferred mode when you have time to adjust for a stationary subject. Sometimes you only have a split second to capture a great shot.
7
Use a wider aperture for portraits to make your subject pop
8
Prevent blurry pictures by
matching shutter speed
to the lens focal length
9
Straighten and crop when editing
The viewfinder or the preview on your LCD is quite small compared to full-screen editing so you may realize it needs adjusting once you see it on a bigger screen. Simply rotate your images in post production software and crop out the empty spaces.
10
Avoid camera shake
Start by doing what you can to reduce camera movement, which begins with learning how to properly hold a camera.
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11
Keep both eyes open when looking through the rangefinder
Secondly, keeping both eyes open lets you monitor what’s out of the frame so you can predict when your subject will enter the frame. This is important for capturing sports, animals, or any kind of action shots.
12
Learn to use exposure compensation
You can quickly fix these images by using the in-camera exposure compensation to make your subject look just right.
13
Photograph what you love
This will keep you interested in photography and allow you to overcome learning obstacles without breaking a sweat.
14
Make use of reflections
You can find them after (or even during) rainy days, in puddles, in lakes and even in swimming pools. Water isn’t the only source, try mirrors, big glass windows, and chromed out fixtures.
Tips for Common Types of Photos
15
Utilize the photography “golden hour”
The longer shadows and especially the more diffused light during these periods provide much more flattering light. Since the light is diffused, you’re much less likely to ‘blow out’ highlights or lose detail in the shadows that are difficult to avoid during the strong light available during most of the day.
This golden hour tool calculates the golden hour for you based on your location.
16
Get a low cost reflector to drastically increase your options
Foldable fabric ones are also available at photography stores. The black side lets you block or reduce lights, while the white side can be used to fill in shadows. These two options give you much greater control with positioning and angles instead of being limited by the main light source. If there is too much contrast in your scene, use a reflector to fill the shadows on your subject. Adjust the reflector’s distance to your subject to control the intensity of the fill light.
17
How to photograph fireworks
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18
Portrait photography tips
Your best bet is to use window light. Turn off all the lights in the room and move near a window with some curtains so you can play around with diffusing the light.
Turning off all the lights includes the pop-up flash on your camera too. Make sure you focus on the eyes, make your subjects feel comfortable, and give it a shot!
19
Pet photography tips
Some pets can be very active too, so a short telephoto lens can help if you’re backed up against a wall. Shoot in shutter priority mode and hover around 1/125 sec to 1/500 sec depending on the pet. Lastly, similar to human subjects keep focus on the eyes sharp.
20
Landscape photography tips
These images can trigger powerful responses with the stories they tell or the scenes they portray. But first you want to make sure you’re ready with proper gear and technique.
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21
Party photography tips
Avoid using the built-in flash since it creates unflattering images. Opt for an external flash or a mounted one you can direct to bounce off ceilings or walls.
22
How to paint with light
People are usually receptive to it because it’s very relatable to drawing. You can get pretty creative with this too, depending on how many people are drawing, and your source of light.
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Photography Equipment Tips
23
Start off by purchasing a digital SLR with a “cropped” sensor
The tradeoff is usually quality and low light performance and it will affect focal length of lenses you choose for specific photographs. It is relatively difficult to tell the difference in quality, so when it comes to the price savings, a smaller sensor is a great choice for folks just starting out.
24
Use a prime lens for better creativity
Using a prime lens also makes you consider your framing more since you’ll be forced into situations where there will be obvious things you want to include or remove from the frame. Finally, fixed lenses are usually faster and aren’t confined to aperture limitations at various focal lengths.
25
Don’t try to clean the
inside of your camera
Leave it alone and take your camera to a local Borrowlenses for cleaning.
26
Push your gear to its limits before buying more
It’s easy to get sucked into buying fancy new gadgets, but take time to push your current gear to the limit so you’ll be better informed of needs later, and prevent frivolous spending at the same time. You’ll discover that having gear restrictions can improve creativity in various areas too.
27
Memory cards: size matters
Although digital storage is relatively stable, there is still a chance your data could corrupt. If you have a very large memory card and plan to keep using it until you run out of space, your chances of losing all of your photographs are much higher than if you switched out with smaller cards in between sessions.
28
Don’t fall into the megapixel trap
Do megapixels matter though? They matter up to a point if you’re looking to make large prints, banners, or posters, but investigate picture quality before buying, instead of relying heavily on the pixel count.
As an extreme example, it’s highly unlikely a 8-megapixel camera phone could produce results as good as a 8-megapixel digital SLR produced in the same year, simply because the phone’s camera will be limited in quality due to its size.
29
Get a filter to protect each
lens from scratches
Sometimes these filters can cause flares on your images though, so pay attention. You may have to remove the filter for some photographs.
Photography Composition Tips
30
Use the “Rule Of Thirds” for balanced photos
The rule of thirds in photography is not a hard and fast rule, but a good guideline to follow instead of just placing your subject dead center by default.
31
Change up your perspective for better results
Get on a chair or crouch down—anything to get above or below your subject to find an interesting perspective. If you practice this often, you’ll be more prepared to see the world and subjects in a new way and capture more interesting images.
32
Practice selective framing
for more impact
Whether you’re trying to capture a picture of a friend, a sunset, an action scene, an event, or a specific mood, place your emphasis on that and consider how you can add or remove what’s in the frame to best tell the story.
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33
Rotate your camera
for vertical shots
Try to mix things up by actively remembering to rotate your camera vertically for a different look. This keeps you in the mindset to be open to other possibilities. This can often result in improved photographs too!
34
Make use of leading lines
Lines that converge create depth and draw the viewer in while curved lines can take you around the frame and eventually land on the main subject.
35
Pay attention to depth of field
Depth of field is largely determined by the aperture size you set and your distance to the subject. Wider apertures emphasize depth of field, and so does getting closer to your subject.
36
Learn composition from the masters
These artists typically work within a frame and through many years of expertise make decisions about composition. Study what they’ve done and try to pick up some pointers from what you like (or don’t like).
37
Give your subject some space
38
Fill the frame
Remedy this by moving in closer or zooming in.
39
Isolate the details
Look for unique details or features you can focus in on and push everything else out of the frame. This can uncover hidden gems in situations when you don’t have a great scene to begin with too.
40
Try the exact opposite of all these composition rules
Perhaps you want to create tension by putting your subject up against the edges. Maybe you want to shoot a whole series dead center and ignore the rule of thirds. Use the rules as a guide, but be sure to break them and experiment to discover something new.
Camera Settings & Features
41
Learn to use the histogram
It will help you avoid unusable photos from overexposing bright whites and underexposing dark details in lower light situations.
Here are 7 examples of reading histograms from Clickin Moms.
42
Shoot in RAW + JPEG
Shoot in both RAW and JPEG, and if the shot you were going for is already good you can just delete the RAW version.
43
Use burst mode for
unpredictable subjects
This can also be helpful for things like group photos—you’ll be able to pick through a set of shots to find one with no one blinking!
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44
Use the correct shooting mode for the best effect
Shutter priority - Usually labeled S or Tv. Use shutter priority when you want to prioritize capturing something in motion like for wildlife, kids sports, people, or vehicles.
Program mode - Similar to fully automatic mode, except you can adjust the aperture and shutter setting combination for desired effect and still achieve proper exposure. This is good for when you just want to make sure you get a properly exposed shot, with flexibility when needed.
45
Don’t use built-in flash as a primary light source
It’s mainly useful as fill flash, such as when harsh sunlight is casting dark shadows across your entire subject. It’s also helpful in emergencies when there’s almost no light around and you just want to capture an image of something—even then it will create unflattering shadows and highlights on your subject.
46
Use as many automatic
modes as you can
47
Use the right White Balance setting
Color temperature is measured on the Kelvin scale. You can leave this camera setting to automatic for most conditions, but occasionally you’ll need to set the white balance manually when your camera can’t figure out complex lighting situations.
Courtesy of: Borrowlenses.com/blog/photography
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