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Self-improvement assignments

This is a discussion on Self-improvement assignments within the General photography forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; I'm not sure if this will help anyone's photog skills, but it's a fun game to play with the little ...

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  1. #1
    BlueX's Avatar
    BlueX is offline Senior Member
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    I'm not sure if this will help anyone's photog skills, but it's a fun game to play with the little ones. I came up with it while at a playground with my son. He always want me to catch him but I sometimes don't have the energy to just straight out catch him. He would also run (and scream) whenever he saw me coming with the camera. So I just put the 2 together into a game.

    You will need a place to play. I recommend a playground/jungle gym type place but you could do this at a park, inside a big house, or where ever is big enough to run around and hide. The more complex the place, the more fun it is and the more potential for interesting pics.

    You will need at least one child (or child at heart) willing to run around and hide.

    And you will of course need a camera. A fast one, such as a dslr is preferable, although a point and shoot might be a fun challenge. A real challenge would be to turn off your auto focus!

    The object of the game is to get "good" shots of the child while they are evading you. I warn you, if you "spray and pray" with burst mode, you gonna have lots of pics. But memory's cheap and digital's free. And even if you don't come home with any winners, at least you get to bond with the subject.

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    mindforge is offline Senior Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by BlueX View Post
    I'm not sure if this will help anyone's photog skills, but it's a fun game to play with the little ones. I came up with it while at a playground with my son. He always want me to catch him but I sometimes don't have the energy to just straight out catch him. He would also run (and scream) whenever he saw me coming with the camera. So I just put the 2 together into a game.
    Changing perspectives is always a good thing. Here are some photo exercises I do.

    1. Take pictures of letters. Try to do the alphabet in 10 minutes. The drawback -- you cannot take pictures of actual letters they must be formed by objects with minimal manipulation. This makes you change perspective around objects. The time limit really helps.

    2. In twilight, try and take slower shots of passing cars. It really helps with panning. Increase zoom to make it harder.

    3. Chase your kids around with a camera. Use single shots only. Decrease shutter speed for a challenge.

    4. Shoot film. I used to shoot one shot a day with a film camera. I shoot three to five shots a day now. I am upgrading my film camera soon. Shooting film brings you backward, slows your composition down -- you have to pay for film.

    5. My favorite. Use 3 or more wireless flashes to create interesting lighting on a subject. I started doing this with lamps and aluminum wrapped cardboard tubes and stuff.

    6. Get out once a week to take pictures at a place you have never been. Make a list of these places. Print ten pictures from each trip but only ten for your own album for the trips. Plan them a month in advance... take your family... whatever. Just print the pictures... it really helps to keep a album or journal with the pictures in them.

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