Printing your photos has a few added bonuses. Firstly, you get to admire your own work, picking up details on how to improve your photography each time you view them. Secondly, comforted in the knowledge that you have saved your work form collecting virtual dust and dying in the dark corners of your hard drive, you will also reap the benefits of a great nights sleep.
New team shooter Simon Markhof joins the Vallerret Photography Gloves team. Simon hails from Bavaria in Germany and first fell in love with photography 2005. Read more to find out how he blends his love for snowboarding with his love of photography.
In a previous TST, we mentioned that learning a new skill liketaking portraitswould tremendously enhance your ski and snowboard photography. Team shooter Rickard Croy takes it to the next level providing you a tip to improve your portrait photography without any new gear, any additional costs, and just a simple adjustment.
The sun produces shadows (of course), which creates depth and contrast, and there is the normal rule of shooting with your back to the sun thus lighting up your subject. However, there is another trick and this is the real kicker!
It’s all about telling the story and providing the viewer with a window to what you are seeing. By including more landscape in your ski and snowboard photography you can portray the epicness and grandeur of the action in all its glory. Getting better at landscape photography or to be more precise, looking at the landscape in terms of composition, line and form is going to give your ski and snowboard photography the x-factor.
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