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Search results for: photography tips solutions understanding focal length field view

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12 Tips to Improve Wildlife Photos Without Buying New Gear
12 Tips to Improve Wildlife Photos without Buying New Gear
by Mathew Malwitz · Posted 03/30/2026
There’s an old adage that claims in order to be a wildlife photographer, you need a lot of time and a lot of money. This is only partly true. Many great wildlife photo opportunities can occur in urban parks and even in your own backyard, as long as we know what we’re doing. In this article, we’re going to cover a number of essential tips that will help you become a better wildlife photographer. If you’ve read our introduction
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Wildlife Photography
Introduction to Wildlife Photography
Introduction to Wildlife Photography
by Mathew Malwitz · Posted 01/27/2026
Despite what you might have seen on the internet, you don’t need all the money and time in the world to photograph wildlife. Sure, an African safari would be nice, but it is by no means the only way to capture stunning images of wild animals. In fact, regardless of where you live, odds are there’s a vast ecosystem that likely goes unnoticed. If you have trees in your neighborhood, you’re off to a great start. What You Need to Photograph Wildlife While gear plays a crucial role in our ability to photograph wildlife, it isn’t everything. In this
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Outdoor Photography
Wildlife Photography
Telephoto Lenses
Macro Photography
Let’s Go to the Zoo!
Let’s Go to the Zoo!
by Mathew Malwitz · Posted 12/05/2025
What better place to spend a Saturday morning than the zoo. You can enjoy some time outside, all while seeing a variety of both local and exotic animals you'd otherwise never dream of encountering. Zoos also are great place to try your hand at photographing wildlife! In this guide, we're talking about taking our camera to the zoo to capture natural looking images of animals in their element! We'll be covering what you need as well as tips and tricks that'll help you capture stunning, natural looking images of animals. Above photograph © Mathew
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Wildlife Photography
Nature Photography
10 Tips Every Beginning Portrait Photographer Should Know
10 Tips Every Beginning Portrait Photographer Should Know
by Mathew Malwitz · Posted 09/15/2025
Portraiture: It’s one of the most popular and prevalent forms of photography. Although it may seem simple on paper, it comes with its own unique obstacles. Of course, you’ll want to be familiar with your gear. This is essential to all working photographers, but it allows you to focus your efforts on the genre-specific challenges you’ll face. When photographing people, you’ll find that some folks are photogenic, while others are not. Your job as a photographer is to break down the barriers set by your clients and to put them in the most
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Photography Education
Portrait Photography
Calculating Hyperfocal Distance in Photography
by Todd Vorenkamp · Posted 08/22/2022
A lens’s hyperfocal distance—a mathematical combination of lens focal length, aperture or f-stop, and focus distance—is a tool that photographers can use to maximize their depth of field for capturing nearby foregrounds and distant backgrounds in acceptable sharpness. While you can always dial up your lens’s sharpest aperture (sweet spot), many landscape photographers want as
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Depth of Field
focal length
aperture
Teaching My Kids Photography: Smartphones to DSLRs
by John Harris · Posted 04/20/2020
I love spending time with my kids, lots and lots of time. And while we are passing all of this time together, I thought I’d have a try at teaching them a little bit about photography. I don’t go into this endeavor with any illusions; they are probably going to end up teaching me. My kids were both born well after the year 2000 and, I’d argue, that alone puts their visual acumen far ahead of what mine was at their age. Their understanding of photography as a language and their consideration of what can happen inside a frame is much more
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Smartphone Photography
Mobile Photography
Road’s End Workshop, with Paige and Corey: Travel Log No. 2
by Paige Denkin · Posted 08/30/2019
It’s common knowledge that things won’t go according to plan. Deadlines will be missed; projects will go awry, and part of the adventure is learning to roll with the punches. But this felt like more than a few punches—we felt defeated. Our renovation process took a turn for the worse, not once, but twice. After five months of heartbreak, heated arguments, and two renovation companies with less than noble intentions, our 29' Airstream ended up in my childhood backyard. Our timeline had us on the road by mid-January, but life had other plans for
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Road's End Workshop
travel photographer
travel photography tips
Understanding Exposure, Part 3: Shutter Speed
by Todd Vorenkamp · Posted 10/20/2018
Shutter speed is a measurement of time that a camera's shutter is open—allowing light, usually after it has passed through a lens and through the aperture diaphragm, to strike a photosensitive surface, like film or a digital sensor. This article is part of a multi-part series of about photographic Exposure.1. Introduction: The Exposure Triangle2.
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Camera Technology
DSLR Cameras
Understanding Exposure
The Home Studio, Part 2: Essential Gear
by Dawn Wayand · Posted 04/24/2018
Your camera is an extension of you in your studio. What you shoot with can be just as important as how you shoot. Choosing the right gear to help you perform better during a photo shoot is worth careful consideration. In this article, I will discuss cameras, but go more into depth on lenses, light meters, and care kits for your gear to help give you a better understanding of each and what features to look for when purchasing each component. Robert Olsen;Model: Kristin Rutty Digital Cameras There are a few different types of digital
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Studio Photography
A Glossary of Digital Photography Terms
by Allan Weitz · Posted 03/21/2016
Sometimes, the phrases, acronyms and strings of numbers or number-letter combinations used to identify photographic hardware or techniques can be daunting to the uninitiated neophyte photographer. We've prepared a list of the basic terms. Have we left any out that you think should be added? Please let us know! 0-9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I |
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DSLR Cameras
Optical Filters in a Digital World, with Ira Tiffen
by Steven Gladstone · Posted 10/01/2015
I have been using filters ever since I first shot Super 8 film with a little Kodak M-22 camera. Just press the funny-looking piece of metal into the top of the camera to drop in (or remove—I can't remember which it was) the Wratten 85 filter that allowed you to use tungsten-balanced film in daylight, and achieve the correct color balance. Over the years, my filter experience has pretty much stayed the same—I use filters to achieve a
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Filters & Accessories
Depth of Field, Part III: The Myths
Depth of Field, Part III: The Myths
by Todd Vorenkamp · Posted 07/28/2015
There are several myths and misconceptions surrounding Depth of Field. In Part I, we looked at the basics of DOF. Part II got into the math behind how to calculate DOF. Here, in Part III, I hope to
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Camera Technology
Depth of Field, Part I: The Basics
Depth of Field, Part I: The Basics
by Todd Vorenkamp · Posted 07/28/2015
Depth of field (DOF) is defined as the area in a projected image, forward and aft of the focal plane, which also appears to be in focus in the image. When you pass light through a lens and focus that light to form an image on a piece of film, digital sensor, projection screen, etc., the area of the image that is in true focus is razor thin—the focal plane. Everything else is out of focus, to some degree. However, because of the subtlety of the out-of focus regions, we do not notice the softness of the image until, as objects are located
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Photography Education
Understanding Crop Factor
by Todd Vorenkamp · Posted 07/27/2015
There is a great deal of confusion surrounding crop factor, and it is particularly difficult to explain, but let’s give it a try, shall we? Before we dive in, let me dispel two vicious rumors related to crop factor that are circulating through the photography (Internet) world today:   Crop factor does NOT affect a lens’s focal length. Crop factor does NOT affect a lens’s aperture. Before you scroll to the bottom of the screen to leave a comment to the contrary, let me explain why I am stating these facts…
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Camera Technology
Understanding Focal Length
by Todd Vorenkamp · Posted 07/10/2015
The primary measurement of a lens is its focal length. The focal length of a lens, expressed in millimeters, is the distance from the lens’s optical center (or nodal point) to the image plane in the camera (often illustrated by a "Φ" on the top plate of a camera body) when the lens is focused at infinity. The image plane in the camera is where you will find your digital sensor or film plate. If you are an optical engineer, this is important
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SLR Lenses

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