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Sun. Scape. Ing your day
Nature's Beauty...
This cool looking creature is a Dragon Lizard of some kind that my grandson brought home from school over Thanksgiving break. He was so sweet and loved to have his head rubbed. Fun lizard!
Until next time, this is Sunscape
https://steemit.com/@sunscape
#smartphonephotography #steemit #dragonlizard
Nature's Beauty...
This cool looking creature is a Dragon Lizard of some kind that my grandson brought home from school over Thanksgiving break. He was so sweet and loved to have his head rubbed. Fun lizard!
Until next time, this is Sunscape
https://steemit.com/@sunscape
#smartphonephotography #steemit #dragonlizard
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This is what David Alan Harvey said about the benefits of shooting with a phone:
“Sooner or later, we will all take photos with the phone. It is a part of your body. You turn it on quickly. The quality is good, you can’t tell the difference once you get it printed it in a magazine. Only problems with phones are that you can’t get a shallow depth-of-field. But you can use a DSLR for low depth-of-field photos. With a phone, there is a certain type of looseness you have. If everyone shot with phones, we would all get better. You can dance with your phone. The phone is good to work with.”
He also describes the experience shooting on a phone:
“You can use the phone like an 8×10 view camera– like looking through a ground glass. I don’t use the viewfinder much anymore (I prefer live view). There’s no machine in-between when taking photos with a phone. If I could choose my ideal setup, I would use a digital Leica (because it is simple and has very few dials) and a phone for everything else. I would also stick with my Mamiya 7 and Bessa for film. I would put my other cameras somewhere else.”
Picture by David Alan Harvey
#howto #mobilephotography #smartphonephotography
“Sooner or later, we will all take photos with the phone. It is a part of your body. You turn it on quickly. The quality is good, you can’t tell the difference once you get it printed it in a magazine. Only problems with phones are that you can’t get a shallow depth-of-field. But you can use a DSLR for low depth-of-field photos. With a phone, there is a certain type of looseness you have. If everyone shot with phones, we would all get better. You can dance with your phone. The phone is good to work with.”
He also describes the experience shooting on a phone:
“You can use the phone like an 8×10 view camera– like looking through a ground glass. I don’t use the viewfinder much anymore (I prefer live view). There’s no machine in-between when taking photos with a phone. If I could choose my ideal setup, I would use a digital Leica (because it is simple and has very few dials) and a phone for everything else. I would also stick with my Mamiya 7 and Bessa for film. I would put my other cameras somewhere else.”
Picture by David Alan Harvey
#howto #mobilephotography #smartphonephotography

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