There are 57,910 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574984
read moreThere are 57,910 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574876
read moreThere are 57,910 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574867
read moreA Post By: Simon Ringsmuth When you go out to take photos it can be tempting to start shooting right away with the goal of getting the ideal image or capturing the perfect picture. But before you get your camera out, it might be good to take the opposite approach and slow down. Way down. Let’s take a minute to consider some lessons you can learn from the age-old tale of the tortoise and the hare. Ironically, one of the most important things you can do when inspiration strikes is to move slowly like the tortoise, rather than rush along like...
read moreA Post By: Keith Cuddeback Everybody sends and receives lots of photographs through email, especially us photographers. We all inadvertently lose track of some of those photos too. That’s just the way it is. It happened to me and, yesterday, thanks to the app I’m reviewing today, I was reunited with one special long-lost photo of mine! Lost Photos – The App Circumstances came to pass that I was introduced to this App called, Lost Photos. The promise this App makes to you is to uncover photos buried deep in your email account. After all,...
read moreWow, #9 really stopped me in my tracks! And then the ones that follow it are interesting too. Thanks, DPR. Source Article from http://www.dpreview.com/news/2014/05/18/melt-portrait-of-an-iceberg
read moreThere are 56,882 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574872
read moreThere are 56,882 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574817
read moreThere are 56,882 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574878
read moreThere are 56,882 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574509
read moreWide-Angle Lenses For Real Estate Photography: How Wide is Wide? Interior Lighting With Multiple Strobes: By Scott Hargis What Should You Charge For Real Estate Photography? Don’t Charge For Real Estate Photography Until Your Verticals are Vertical Choosing Gear To Get Started in Real Estate Photography For Least the Cost My Formula For Pricing Real Estate Photography The Arithmetic Of Real Estate Photography Pricing Bracketing With Flash For Exposure Fusion and HDR Flash For Beginners...
read moreA Post By: Darlene Hildebrandt Lately we’ve had a few articles on food photography including: 8 Steps to Create Mouth Watering Food Photography 5 Tips to Seriously Improve Your Food Photography Techniques 11 Quick Food Photography Tips to Make Mouth Watering Images So I thought I’d share a collection of some appetizing food photos to get you not only salivating but inspired to get motivated to photograph your food! Starting with morning coffee hrrruuumm by U izmylove on 500px Caffe Latte for two by Gert Lavsen on 500px Coffee and Donuts...
read moreA Post By: Darlene Hildebrandt By il-young ko Earlier today I shared a collection of food photography to make you hungry and hopefully get you inspired. Now it’s your turn! This week’s photography challenge is of course: Food Photography! Here are a few more to get you drooling and thinking. There’s a lot to good food photography but if I had to give you one tip to get started it would be this – keep it simple and clean. Keep the background uncluttered and your props plain. Let the food be the star. By Anne By Cat By liz west By Nick...
read moreExcellent work! Really a great way to demo the various techniques, most of which are normally used for astrophotography. As impressive as the close-ups are, I don’t think they fit-in as well… the transition is too abrupt. The write-up on the WWW site ties things together better. Source Article from http://www.dpreview.com/news/2014/05/17/flickering-fireflies-in-time-lapse
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read moreA Post By: Darren Rowse Over the last month we’ve been launching our brand new Landscape Photography Post Production eBook – Loving Landscapes. As part of that launch we offered Early Bird buyers the chance to go in the draw to win $1500 towards new gear. Today we drew that winner and let her know of her win. The winner is – Sue Hunt! Congratulations Sue – we’ve emailed you with details! Thanks to everyone for your feedback on our eBook – we’ve never had so much positive feedback on an eBook. Here are just some of the reviews!...
read moreA Post By: Gavin Hardcastle If you’re in the market for an ultra portable robotic tripod head that pans and tilts and is super easy to setup, you’ll be wanting to take a look at the Syrp Genie. The guys at Syrp have done their Kickstarter backers proud with a solid product that looks as good as it performs. While it can’t pan and tilt at the same time, the Genie has a little trick up its sleeve to add an extra layer of motion control to its arsenal. When you want to put the Genie on to a slider you won’t need any extra motors or...
read moreA Post By: Alex Morrison Bad Weather Photography Equals High Impact  Photos Remember those days when you looked out your window and wished that the weather was better so you could get out and take some fantastic photographs? Do rainy, windy, stormy days stifle your photographic ambitions? I’ll give you five reasons why bad weather is not all doom and gloom for photographers. The things that keep most people indoors on bad weather days are the very things that have creative photographers heading for the great outdoors. Grab a rain jacket,...
read more“Superzoom crapbox”? Er, OK. I carry travel zooms now, after watching my wife get better shots than me with a 480mm equivalent “superzoom crapbox”, while I got poorly framed (but nice to pixel peep!) shots with my enthusiast compact. I guess if you are shooting flowers in the yard, you can endlessly reframe shot after shot. It doesn’t work like that for me in the wild, either traveling in unknown cities where there are buildings on a distant hillside I would like to fill the frame, or the other day, when I went...
read moreCongrats to Tokina for embracing the tech.In the past, most of Tokina AF lenses for Nikon would omit internal autofocus motor and rely on Nikon DSLR motor-pin screw drive AF. Nevertheless, I love that decision, maybe DSLR body AF motor coupling sounds outdated, but I guess there’d be less chance that AF motor in you lenses could go bad. Sure DSLR body AF motor could go bad as well, but in case of Nikon, usually would take ages. My D1x (about a decade old) could still drive those big 80-200/2.8 AF lenses no problem, heck, I could even...
read moreSony has formally announced the Cyber-shot DSC RX100 III, the most advanced model yet in its 1″-type sensor range of compacts. The RX100 III features the same 20.2MP BSI CMOS sensor as the II, but gains the latest Bionz X processor, a pop-up electronic viewfinder and a faster lens. The RX100 III’s zoom now extends across a 24-70mm equivalent range, with a maximum aperture of F1.8-2.8, a great improvement on the 28-100mm, F1.8-4.9 lenses sported by the existing two models. In addition, the rear LCD now flips up by up to 180° for...
read moreAll is just a question of point of view. For someone that is in video, it is a bad compromise to a full pro video camera, it is a good compromise if one considers the price compared to a full pro video camera and the low light ability in this matter. For stills it is just a flop, the good old reworked D700 sensor with his D70 resolution and FF dynamics, that can serve for nice downsized shots at low light. For that price, it is too expensive, starts noising at 6500 iso just like any sensor, loses details at 3200 iso, like any sensor, and...
read moreThe Google Photo Sphere 360-degree panorama feature was introduced in November 2012 with version 4.2 of the Android mobile OS. However, until now, viewing 360-degree panoramas not created with Google Camera or a compatible app was a slightly cumbersome process. You had to manually add a XMP metadata file to your images in order to view them as a Photo Sphere in Google Plus. Google has now changed that with an update to Google+. You can now easily view 360-degree panoramas created manually with images from a DSLR or compact camera in...
read moreThere are 56,949 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574392
read moreThere are 56,949 roles online. Apply now! Source Article from http://www.starnow.com.au/Link.aspx?l=4815&return_url=%2Flistings%2FListingDetail.aspx%3Fl_id%3D574393
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