The SHALLOW Depth of Field TRAP

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Jamie Windsor

Jamie Windsor

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 785
@winc06
@winc06 6 ай бұрын
Learned more in 17 minutes than in the last dozen photography videos I have looked at. Bravo.
@seanyessmanncoaching4056
@seanyessmanncoaching4056 6 ай бұрын
Literally just said this exact same thing to my wife at the end of the video!
@boatman222345
@boatman222345 6 ай бұрын
@@seanyessmanncoaching4056Literally just said this to my wife 1 hr ago. Jamie is a treasure! I stumbled on this video today completely by chance and I am hooked! Hope you are feeling better Jamie, I am completely confident that you are creative one way or the other...
@MrRandomatom
@MrRandomatom 6 ай бұрын
So glad to see more from you again, Jamie. Wishing you healing, positivity, and strength.
@andredemony
@andredemony 6 ай бұрын
I was a photojournalist between 1999 and 2012. Now I am half way through the video and suddenly my favourite youtuber talks about my favourite living photographer. BLISS. Welcome back Jamie!
@retropixer
@retropixer 6 ай бұрын
There’s no one better on YT with the production value, clarity, and the substance, than your work. Can’t thank you enough, on behalf of all photographers.
@maxhighstein
@maxhighstein 6 ай бұрын
I appreciate how carefully you produced this video - the graphics, transitions, timing, and your delivery are all beautifully done. Not to mention your intelligent content. You make KZbin look good.
@glitch314
@glitch314 26 күн бұрын
Dude.. 12 minutes in and I had to stop the video tomwrite this... thank you from the bottom of my heart... in my years of watching videos, reading photobooks, chatting with pros and gazing at photos to learn, i never came acroas such valuable advices. I can't believe i'm learning all this for free... you are an angel.
@ronyedin
@ronyedin 6 ай бұрын
“Be intentional”… after 18 years as a photographer, I stopped using zoom lenses. We have become lazy sometimes just zooming into people and objects. I switched to only using 35 and 85mm primes now. It forces me to move and I have found that I get more interesting angles and started to appreciate compositions. It has actually make me love photography again.
@babaarcuszatir
@babaarcuszatir 6 ай бұрын
To be fair, zooming and changing the distance to the subject with a fixed focal length lens are two separate things giving different results. You can change the distance also with a zoom lens, but cannot zoom with a fixed lens (other than crop).
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
I like primes primarily because they make me take better photos (as I'm forced to visualise more). 35 and 85 are a magic combination. That's my pairing of choice too.
@ronyedin
@ronyedin 6 ай бұрын
@@babaarcuszatir The point I'm trying to make is that using zoom lenses can sometimes result in tunnel vision, similar to a sniper waiting for the perfect shot. At events, for instance, you might find yourself stationed at the back with a 70-200 lens, potentially missing other opportunities. I've noticed that when I use prime lenses, I'm more proactive in scouting the surroundings, even beyond the viewfinder. This approach makes me work harder to be intentional, leading to more creative compositions. While it's possible to achieve this with zoom lenses as well, I find that primes change my mental approach to photography.
@desohare8683
@desohare8683 6 ай бұрын
This is fine for a leisurely and narrow (ouch!} approach to photography. Great if it works for you. Many of us in many situations, do not have the luxury of working with just 2 focal lengths and simply walking up to your subject to get closer This doesn't work for public music and performance events or for sport, or shooting boats from the shore or air shows, or weddings from a fixed position or anything really that requires specific shots from an unalterable distance. Even when you can move, zoom lenses are not evil. Different focal lengths have different characteristics. Choose the perspective you want THEN move to the ideal position. The creative opportunities of wide angle or telephoto lenses shouldn't be dismissed Restricting yourself to only two perspectives doesn't give you freedom, it just restricts all your photographs to only two angles of view. The one advantage of primes of course are larger apertures and finer control of depth of field.
@ronyedin
@ronyedin 6 ай бұрын
@@desohare8683 I appreciate your perspective on the practical versatility of zoom lenses, especially in constrained shooting environments like sports or events. I am very aware of that. I also shoot wildlife and event photography. My point about "being intentional" with prime lenses is less about dismissing zooms and more about rediscovering a personal connection to the craft of photography. Using primes challenges me to engage more deeply with the environment, moving physically to find the best shot rather than adjusting the zoom. This approach has reinvigorated my passion for photography by pushing creative boundaries, even if it's not always the most practical choice in every situation. Each lens type has its strengths, and choosing one over the other can shift not just our techniques, but also our artistic vision.
@joshuabrits6737
@joshuabrits6737 6 ай бұрын
This has got to be one of, if not THE best photography channels on KZbin. I love the depth and intentional thought of the videos. Thank you for creating this space, Jamie.
@sirspankalottt
@sirspankalottt 6 ай бұрын
The GOAT of photography videos on youtube
@soundscape26
@soundscape26 6 ай бұрын
Him and Sean Tucker may I add.
@josesalgado2796
@josesalgado2796 5 ай бұрын
I think Pat Kay does a great job explaining different compositions and visual patterns. Definitely worth checking out if you like this type of video.
@mareius
@mareius 2 ай бұрын
I love how the images are edited to visualize the content. Well done. Thanks.
@riteshmahashabde
@riteshmahashabde 24 күн бұрын
Excellent video Jamie 🙏🏻 I believe people who shoot with long lenses and wide aperture think subject is THE ONLY important thing , everything else is just distraction. While that might suit particular situations, it doesn’t convey stories as an environmental portrait ( wide angle /controlled DOF). You pinned it perfectly. Thank you
@christopherbgriffith
@christopherbgriffith 6 ай бұрын
When I first got The Suffering of Light my mind was truly blown. "How did he manage to get these shots?!?" I'm a huge fan of letting dark areas fall to blackness and I love his color choices. I can only hope to take a Webb-ish photo one day. :) So glad to see you back, Jamie! I hope you're feeling better. You make KZbin a better place with your work.
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
His work is really amazing, isn't it?
@mgscheue
@mgscheue 6 ай бұрын
I can’t imagine how his brain works. So much going on at once in his photos and it all works. They’re often like puzzles.
@S3l3ct1ve
@S3l3ct1ve 6 ай бұрын
@@mgscheue Use a wider lens, you will notice that a lot of the subjects just fall right in to place on their own. And also when you see an interesting subject, you can almost place him anywhere you want and he will make the photograph stand out. Also try to look for the areas where the light devides the potential field of view in different lit zones, then just wait for the subjects to pass by that area. Of course it takes hundreds of attempts to get that right image. We also only see the best shoots, he probably had hundeds of film rolls just to get couple of those high quality images
@mgscheue
@mgscheue 6 ай бұрын
@@S3l3ct1ve All excellent ideas. And I did recently see an interview with him where he said he does shoot a lot.
@nassimabed
@nassimabed 6 ай бұрын
I'm glad I discovered this channel. Most others focus on the technology and the physics of photography and the "getting that jaw dropping shot". This channel is refreshing in how it explores the art of it all.
@CaviteTechnology
@CaviteTechnology 6 ай бұрын
A Jamie Windsor vid always brightens my day! Love the tips :D
@miro_juric
@miro_juric 6 ай бұрын
Glad to be back, Jamie 👍
@BobN54
@BobN54 6 ай бұрын
First class video. Someone who understands how to use DoF, rather than just the technicalities of it.
@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp 5 ай бұрын
That differentiates the camera buffs from a visual artist.
@mrhogan2612
@mrhogan2612 4 ай бұрын
Ok, this explained things in ways I've never considered or managed to understand before. Literally got my creative juices excited over what's next, how to play with it and what can be learned. Love it!
@nicocastillo2099
@nicocastillo2099 6 ай бұрын
Christmas came early this year: new videos from Jamie Windsor!!!!!!!
@chrisogrady28
@chrisogrady28 5 ай бұрын
I don't know what you did to the YT algorithm but this video has been in my recommended every day for the past 2 weeks and I've finally been bullied into watching it
@randallbourne2717
@randallbourne2717 5 ай бұрын
Jamie is one of the very few best teachers on YT. IMO, he's at the very top of Photography education with Sean Tucker of UK and Simon D'entremont of Nova Scotia, CA.
@mdunkman
@mdunkman 6 ай бұрын
When I started shooting film, my mom’s advice that she previously got was “f8 and be there”. I also love how my old manual focus lenses provided distance ranges for each aperture directly on the lens.
@MasonZenji
@MasonZenji 6 ай бұрын
Your videos are always so delightful to watch. Glad you’re posting and hope all is well!
@johnnyboy114
@johnnyboy114 6 ай бұрын
Good to have you back Jamie! One thing that I think every photographer misses, overlooks or under appreciates at some point is the element of luck. Alex Webb is a phenomenal photographer, I am also a big fan. But in a couple of interviews I have seen with him, even he admits that, although ALL of the techniques you mention in the video are paramount and used by him for all the photographs he shows, seeing the moment and understanding in a split second to take the shot is just as important. A lot of his images, taken 2-3 seconds before or after just wouldn’t work in the same way. Having the eye to see the potential in a shot, seeing the vision, setting the camera for that vision and having the patience and idea to get the shot is all very well. But if the elements just don’t fall into place, then all that technique, vision, idea and foresight just is not useful at all. Luck is a huge part of this and his kind of photography. Being a wedding photographer myself (and many others will agree), will always say there is that one wedding where nothing happens. And it’s true. The same can be said of many other situations. That’s not an excuse to be a bad photographer, it’s the reality of the art we love and adore. Excellent video as always Jamie! Keep up the good work!
@unclejezza
@unclejezza 5 ай бұрын
So many of us need to watch this - especially newcomers. I've been shooting commercial cinematography for 20yrs and still found value here. None of us know everything!
@billb8262
@billb8262 4 ай бұрын
The amount of work that went into this video is astounding. The examples of composition overlaid with grids and dialogue was very helpful. I just want to genuinely thank you for such great work. I love to learn and your examples, thoroughness, and the level of love of art you demonstrate are outstanding. Thank you kindly.
@jimjimgl3
@jimjimgl3 6 ай бұрын
I've been shooting (editorial and commercial jobs) since 2000. Back then there was a push to have more selective focus--especially for food and still life. While some clients these days seem comfortable with selective focus, I'd say 85% or so want EVERYTHING in focus...thank god for Helicon Focus. The deep focus issue has become so ingrained in me that I have to remember to try selective focus while shooting. And back in the film days I shot 4x5 film so I was pretty addicted to shallow depth of field imagery.
@K3zz21
@K3zz21 5 ай бұрын
Once I got into the habit of shooting f5.6 and higher, I started to have a lot of fun with the freedom of thinking more about composition than focus. It really makes a difference in your perspective.
@MakersTeleMark
@MakersTeleMark 6 ай бұрын
The quality of your posts is top tier. So glad to see you continue. Thank you.
@YouNeedMyVoice
@YouNeedMyVoice 6 ай бұрын
Still don't understand why your videos don't have milions of views 🤔 The details in your videos are just stunning ❤
@salsabilahmedshrestho960
@salsabilahmedshrestho960 5 ай бұрын
cause people want quick and simple.
@fredabery3816
@fredabery3816 6 ай бұрын
Great to see you back, Jamie, and I hope you're fighting fit. Love your use of motion graphics to illustrate concepts- and of course the way you deliver philosophical aspects of the art. Cheers!
@The_NSeven
@The_NSeven 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing me Alex Webb. What incredible photos.
@MatSmithLondon
@MatSmithLondon 6 ай бұрын
In my opinion grids are overused in the analysis here. They can be a fantastic way to focus your compositional by intention but some of the grids superimposed onto the images shown in this video seem tenuous. Anyway, I greatly appreciate any kind of analysis, even if it is tenuous, because analysis always forces you to think about things. The fact I can have an opinion on whether it’s tenuous or not, in itself this is an interesting talking point. It’s a great video you made.
@derekjordan9764
@derekjordan9764 4 ай бұрын
And the fact you made me look up tenuous 🤔😊
@toverjames
@toverjames 3 ай бұрын
tenuous use of "tenuous" here imo
@Anamenti
@Anamenti 3 ай бұрын
I generally feel this way about grids too, but I see their purpose when giving advice aimed at all experience levels. Explaining composition using grids is probably much clearer for people who have no idea where to start with it! Some have a good 'natural' eye for it, gained through experience and time without too much concern about rules, others really don't have an instinct and need to be led to the idea. Even with my dislike of grids I have found them useful sometimes when struggling to get a satisfying composition, no matter how loosely they may adhere to any imaginary lines in the end. It is an interesting point about essay writing generally though, as it does feel a tangential subject to the main focus (heh) of the video. For example I wonder if many really go straight to a fancy bokeh capable lens without being aware of fundamental composition concepts, but instead just need a reminder that they may be neglecting the continued practice of those skills from an over reliance on blur. But overall it felt to me that the video was in all a nice overview on how thinking critically about composition and focus can improve photography, bring individual creative voice to an image, while also providing the foundational technical information needed to achieve that.
@JonasBradda
@JonasBradda 6 ай бұрын
Yes Jamie is back ! The care you put into your videos and the content are missed around here.
@hailey2436
@hailey2436 6 ай бұрын
What makes my heart flutter is another Jamie Windsor video! You make a few but quality content!
@tobiasyoder
@tobiasyoder 6 ай бұрын
Great video. Shooting strictly wide open is exceptionally common for newer wildlife photographers, since again it's a style where you often don't have a lot of control or a lot light. For the first several years I shot only wide open but once I started learning to use wider depths of fields it open up more opportunities I missed before.
@dalloiselle7274
@dalloiselle7274 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing how to break out of the self imposed boundaries of shallow depth of field by providing clear and concise guidelines for doing so or to courage necessary to embark on this path intuitively.
@Kevin_YouTube
@Kevin_YouTube 6 ай бұрын
Brilliant video Jamie - really informative but, as with all of you work, the quality of the video makes it a real pleasurer to watch. So glad that you are able post it. Hope that you are well. Thank you.
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
Thank you
@josh_around
@josh_around 4 ай бұрын
Not only are these helpful photography tips, I think your filmmaking and storytelling style is really beautifully dialed in here as well. ☺️ The way you left the natural pauses in your conversation hi-lights some unique part of your speaking pattern that really kept me engaged all the way though. It elevates the feeling, from a viewers perspective, like what you are saying is really important. Thanks for sharing this!
@rbnPRSS
@rbnPRSS 6 ай бұрын
Glad you're back. Every time I watch one of your videos I feel inspired and want to start creating something immediately. Thank you!
@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp 5 ай бұрын
Ever thought about the idea that there are more ways to "create" than shooting pictures?
@rbnPRSS
@rbnPRSS 5 ай бұрын
@@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp yes, of course, that's why I wrote "creating" and not "taking pictures." Jamie's videos inspire me to be creative in any field I know and not just photography. Also I really like his editing style as well as his tasteful animations. There is always a lot to see and learn for me.
@stephenkennedy62
@stephenkennedy62 6 ай бұрын
I love your style of video and you have a really engaging delivery approach. The content is spot on too! Thanks Jamie
@FTrovatten
@FTrovatten 6 ай бұрын
Bokeh is the laziest way to direct a viewers attention. And I’m as guilty as the next one. But when you look at the great photographs of the past, what made them great, was the whole scene and not some 1.2 blur. Okay - I had to get that out of the way - back to the video :)!
@steelcannibal
@steelcannibal 6 ай бұрын
True. Though people had to be more thoughtful and creative with their composition pre-digital age, because film wasn't cheap. So people really had to weigh out what was worth shooting or not.
@ordinary.american.beauty
@ordinary.american.beauty 6 ай бұрын
Well said I’m not a fan of bokeh at all. I’m a big fan of Jamie Windsor you are top of the top as far as KZbin photography teachers.
@rick-deckard
@rick-deckard 6 ай бұрын
Love your vids 👍
@CAMSMORE
@CAMSMORE 6 ай бұрын
Hi Jamie! So happy to see you back! Thanks for this great content, as always! The way you drove me through different ideas while watching your video is great! Thanks so much for your creativity and for being that helpful!! 🙌
@SharpDesign
@SharpDesign 6 ай бұрын
I totally agree with this statement, especially since I have been guilty of doing it, too.
@enricomarconi8358
@enricomarconi8358 5 ай бұрын
Finally! A video about photography and not gear! Masterfully done! Bravo
@VictorRiley
@VictorRiley 6 ай бұрын
I always loved the portrait photography in the NatGeos issues of my childhood - shot in real film, with a lot of context around the subjects. Thinking about it now, I realize that what made those pictures so great was their use of natural lighting and composition without cheating to beautify by using very shallow depth of field.
@Needacreate
@Needacreate 6 ай бұрын
Wow. It's been a long time, Jamie. Hope you're well, or at least some semblance of well. At any rate, it's heart-warming to hear and see you talk in your nuanced and spot-on way about photography and art again. Presented with carefully selected examples and translated into tasteful and engaging video. It's not least the things that matter to us that help to sustain us.
@sevsuk2011
@sevsuk2011 6 ай бұрын
Another fantastic thought provoking video Jamie. Part of my reason to jump upto full frame, is that I love the ethereal feel to street portraits, shot at
@jacksemmence2704
@jacksemmence2704 6 ай бұрын
the 'position' text animation at 14:36 is so good
@robertosanroman4410
@robertosanroman4410 6 ай бұрын
Animations in Jamie's videos are one of his distinctive identity signs, and, along with his excellent taste for graphic design, probably what make his videos stand so much apart from the crowd. I love his aesthetics. Great to see you back Mr. Windsord
@johnhaas1955
@johnhaas1955 5 ай бұрын
Also noting the great use of sfx to support the animations
@yakamo
@yakamo 6 ай бұрын
Welcome back, i was so happy when i saw this video pop up! :) Hope your doing well. Thank you for another great video.
@richardmaggio
@richardmaggio 6 ай бұрын
Shoot any sort of landscape scene and you have to bring the scene into foucs with narrower aperture. It does make the shot more challenging because you have no choice but to consider the full composition. When i shoot portraits or sports, i find it much easier because you don't have to worry about the background as much and can blur it as much as possible. With sports shutter speed overrides all else usually. Great video!
@jeebsy718
@jeebsy718 5 ай бұрын
The point about knowing your apertures and distances is great. I got a four thirds camera many years ago with a decent prime lens and immediately cranked up the depth of field on everything. Took what I thought was a great close-up portrait of a friend, only to find when I opened it on my computer that only the tip of his nose was properly in focus.
@guptageneralstores5243
@guptageneralstores5243 6 ай бұрын
I recently came across a video on reddit of a fashion film where the filmmaker used a m43 camera with a vintage mamiya lens and it looked like a technicolor dream where with a deep focus the crowded background was as much a part of the imagery as the characters. This guy made the subject standout purely through composition and colors. It had an overwhelming response on his insta page but then I came across a comment on reddit where a guy “points out his failure” of not being able to create a shallow depth of field and introduces the concept of an ND so that he could correct the error 😂 The filmmaker was sweet enough to not mind it at all but it made me think how synthetically we sometimes approach what is pure art. This video is such a positive and inspiring piece for me after coming across something like that coz you cant help but think if it isnt rubbing off on you being surrounded by such approach all the time. Thank you for this
@christopherward5065
@christopherward5065 6 ай бұрын
Thankyou for this escape from lazy conventionality. The narrative and dynamic flow in the frame is so important. I haven’t seen it so well discussed in the age of KZbin influence. I thought your exploration of Alex Webb’s photographic eye was really on point. That narrative layering in composition is even enhanced by particular lenses and the way that they render focus and depth transitions. When the world discovered Bokeh as a concept, it just highlighted Fan Ho, Cartier Bresson and Sebastiao Salgado as compelling image makers by showing how acknowledging and honouring depth of focus creates grounding for a subject.
@joshtpa
@joshtpa 5 ай бұрын
Alex Webb is incredible. Was lucky enough to meet him and his wife for their Brooklyn book release. He’s a true master and how many amazing photographs he has is really hard to comprehend.
@kennym5898
@kennym5898 5 ай бұрын
Great tutorial. I like it that you're using other people's work as examples and not just a self promotion video. A lot of the advice here of using manual focus and aperture settings etc were the norm when I started photography. Using a hand held light meter too. I've spoken to camera users who didn't know what ISO, ASA and DIN actually meant or their relationship to each other. Fundamental information really.
@Jago8407
@Jago8407 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your content, for sharing your knowledge with us. This video will not only make me look different to the world, but now I understand how to look at photographers work with more insight and appreciation!
@DamianDiccox
@DamianDiccox 6 ай бұрын
Your content is absolutely the best, keep up the great work, thank you
@kubace5398
@kubace5398 6 ай бұрын
Great to see you again! Still remember seeing Alex's work for the first time - some 20 years ago. To this day I'm in awe of his compositions. Great video with fantastic analysis (as always).
@homecareful
@homecareful 5 ай бұрын
I've gone back to this again, enjoying it more the second time, Mr. Windsor.
@Daniel_Zalman
@Daniel_Zalman 6 ай бұрын
A Jamie Windsor video is always a special treat! I can’t say that I enjoy Webb’s work. I admire it, though.
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
We all have our different tastes and it makes the world more interesting.
@Daniel_Zalman
@Daniel_Zalman 6 ай бұрын
@@jamiewindsor Yes, of course, Jamie. I think it's more in the sense that he doesn't do much for me emotionally. His craft is astonishing. To be able to organize so many elements in a harmonious way is incredibly challenging. He is unique. Love your channel. I hope you are doing well!
@Elassyahmed
@Elassyahmed 6 ай бұрын
Great video, as always, Jamie. Lovely to see you back, and looking well. Appreciate that the video is aimed at both beginners and advanced photographers. Finally, i don't think most people realize how much work goes into this style of video especially editing.
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
Thank you. They do take me a long time. I get a bit too obsessive about details to be fair.
@Elassyahmed
@Elassyahmed 6 ай бұрын
@@jamiewindsor and it more than shows in the quality of the videos and how well the narrative and the story you are telling flows. ❤️❤️
@boatman222345
@boatman222345 6 ай бұрын
Wow! Easily the most thought provoking video on photography I've ever watched! If it weren't dark out I'd already be out the door with my camera to try out some of these insightful techniques. As someone who has long tended to view "street photography" as banal cliche I was stunned by the complex creativity of Alex Web's imagery and I hunger to,see more of it!
@joseerazevedo
@joseerazevedo 6 ай бұрын
I like the way you select a photographer to illustrate the veideo's theme. Nice to have you back! Thanks for one more freat video!
@JohnMaguire2013
@JohnMaguire2013 6 ай бұрын
The way you presented these concepts was perfect! Excellent video, as usual!
@CAZZIEK321
@CAZZIEK321 5 ай бұрын
The Alex Webb work, causes an energy and discomfort. You can’t help but skim your eyes around the entire image. Your video is brilliant. Thank you.
@LORDS.And.Hammers
@LORDS.And.Hammers 6 ай бұрын
Return of The King. 🙏🏾
@christopherharrison3597
@christopherharrison3597 6 ай бұрын
great to see you back where you belong, instructing and inspiring us all . well done Jamie..
@judithbullard6676
@judithbullard6676 6 ай бұрын
I'm so glad to see your videos again. Absolutely the best photography tutorials on the web. Than you ❤
@patrickchase5614
@patrickchase5614 4 ай бұрын
wrt tip 2, understanding hyperfocal distance was the key for me. Once you understand how that works and how to quickly and intuitively estimate it (because you won't always have time to calculate it) it becomes much easier to manage scene focus. I learned a lot of my more advanced photographic skills working with a 4x5 view camera, and I still have a full collection of tilt-shift lenses for my full-frame digital system. Having tilts and shifts at my disposal allows me to manipulate both composition and focus in ways that wouldn't otherwise be possible. Of course it also makes the sort of dynamic photography that Webb does impractical.
@Jilsonsecklertiu
@Jilsonsecklertiu 6 ай бұрын
Really nice visual literacy explainer for the masses. Alex Webb has that 6th sense as if he can predict what's going to happen.
@acronymphotography
@acronymphotography 6 ай бұрын
Agreed, it’s so easy to rely on the glass to do the work.
@cswrighty
@cswrighty 6 ай бұрын
Excellent video. They always deserve 'full screening' when I watch them.
@josephschimmer302
@josephschimmer302 6 ай бұрын
Your story telling is of another level! And so much to learn. Good to see you back.
@dredoo666
@dredoo666 6 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you're back. Hope everything goes well
@user-tv5dt3nm9y
@user-tv5dt3nm9y 6 ай бұрын
Fantastic and pithy as usual. I rent a super wide 2/8 to shoot an event every year and I do get stuck making shallow focus photos. I will work to expand the envelope and perhaps, that wide angle is there to include and see more, so don't blur it away.
@peterkinskofer6881
@peterkinskofer6881 2 ай бұрын
Many thanks once more Jaimie- your tutorials are so clear, concise and above all inspiring. I always want to run out with my camera immediately after watching one of your lessons.
@labradorhund7769
@labradorhund7769 6 ай бұрын
So glad to have another great video of yours in my feed. You were missed, Jamie! The quality of your videos is unmatched.
@ericlarson6180
@ericlarson6180 6 ай бұрын
I’m glad you highlighted the golden triangle, section etc., a graphic representation of the fibonacci sequence that is part of nature and was a tool of all of the classical painters, it’s far more powerful than the rule of thirds as a compositional technique. Most modern cameras include the grid on their screens and Lightroom/Photoshop provide the spiral, grid and triangles in their crop tools
@pixels1497
@pixels1497 5 ай бұрын
Hi Jamie. Thank you for this. A fascinating and meaningful video. I have learnt more here in 17.28 minutes than the half a dozen or so other videos watched weekly. The content here has made me change how I see and compose my images.
@mattbibbings
@mattbibbings 6 ай бұрын
Premium quality in every sense. Always love your videos. This whole subject is one that I'm sure has cost a lot of photographers a heap of cash because they got convinced that are not real photographers unless they have the fast glass and glue it wide open "like the pros".
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
When I bought my Pentax 67 off this guy on eBay, he sent me a message telling me I'd need to buy some ND filters for it as I must only shoot the lens wide open at f/2.4 (very wide aperture for a medium format). He said that there is no point in shooting the camera at any other aperture. What a weird thing to say.
@mattbibbings
@mattbibbings 6 ай бұрын
@@jamiewindsor at the aperture ring wouldn't have been worn out!😄
@eccod
@eccod 4 ай бұрын
Really amazing stuff. I do a lot with studio strobes in controlled environments, so images like these examples seem like they’re written in another language. I grasped the technological side of photography right away, but the artistic side is something I still struggle with. I’m never done learning though, that’s what keeps me hooked!
@arneheeringa96
@arneheeringa96 3 ай бұрын
Incredibly helpful too is the focusing scale on manual lenses. In some cases you can even extend focus more to the front. I guess you know the trick.
@Roar.
@Roar. 3 ай бұрын
Best photo videos on the planet. Informative and beautiful, inspiring! Keep them coming, Jamie! ❤
@marklloyd7385
@marklloyd7385 6 ай бұрын
Thanks Jamie. Thoughtful and considered advice as always. I think you are bang on about the habits that we often fall into, so slowing down and trying something different seems essential to exploring new visual worlds.😎
@goat2503
@goat2503 5 ай бұрын
Easily my favourite photography channel, always excited to see a new video, thank you for sharing your knowledge and articulating and conveying your point using fantastic examples to help us understand how these techniques come together. I always feel inspired to go and shoot after watching this content. Thank you!
@yourapocalypse216
@yourapocalypse216 2 ай бұрын
Genuinely interesting and inspiring, without being pretentious. Great stuff.
@SeanHuangRealEstate
@SeanHuangRealEstate 4 ай бұрын
This inspired me to take photos with action cameras which always have everything in focus and i can forget about focusing and only focus on composition.
@wheretheyhaveribs55
@wheretheyhaveribs55 6 ай бұрын
My favorite teacher of photography. ❤️
@jeffeisley
@jeffeisley 6 ай бұрын
this got me tearin' up 😢 wonderful analysis. more people need to see this
@chiringo23
@chiringo23 5 ай бұрын
One of my favorite creators on KZbin. Great production and content.
@sarahg3550
@sarahg3550 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for delivering this content - it’s just in time to reevaluate why I have an interest in photography, relearning the basics 😎
@rumenalexandrov
@rumenalexandrov 6 ай бұрын
I’m a videographers but this video is super useful! There a definite sub for this channel! I’ve been looking how to improve my shots, I am tired of shooting 1.4 and even just using the standard grid that comes in every camera
@Mar2623
@Mar2623 6 ай бұрын
Delightful seeing you again posting a gem of a video. My favourite guy of all time
@carlosalmaraz2666
@carlosalmaraz2666 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much Jamie for this master class. Your videos have been very helpful to me, specially now that I'm taking my photography journey more "serious". I hope you keep sharing your thoughts and knowledge on KZbin cause I do really enjoy and learn from them. Saludos from Mexico :)
@livemoksha
@livemoksha 6 ай бұрын
The master of script, editing and narrative!
@Element8909
@Element8909 6 ай бұрын
Overjoyed to see another video from you. I've never heard of Alex Webb, thank you for exposing me to him, his work is amazing.
@GoranSlika
@GoranSlika 6 ай бұрын
Haha a beautiful and extensive analysis of Webb's visual language disguised as a basic video on aperture. Brilliant as always! I had not seen some of the images and they floored me.
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
As I was researching beyond my Alex Webb books, I just seemed to find an endless trove of amazing images. He seems to have the ability to just keep churning out amazing shot after amazing shot.
@GoranSlika
@GoranSlika 6 ай бұрын
@@jamiewindsor so many would be any other photographer’s best capture. Constantly finding the most elegant split-seconds in a busy scene. Do we know how ‘repetitive’ his contact sheets are, generally speaking?
@JensBjorklund-pq8er
@JensBjorklund-pq8er 5 ай бұрын
Absolutely wonderful that you are posting again, thank you for another brilliant post. Take it in your own time and don’t rush, take care!
@jasonobrien4975
@jasonobrien4975 6 ай бұрын
What an informative video. I appreciate the work that has gone into it as well, they are so professional. A master teacher can inspire and motivate, so I’m finishing my coffee then out to enjoy the pleasure of photography. I shoot with primes only on my main camera but do loads on my iPhone where everything is in focus I find the phone challenges me more. A lovely stroll with the IPhone sounds good. We do really appreciate your time and knowledge on these videos☺️ I hope you have an enjoyable weekend whatever you may be doing. Kind regards Jase
@jamiewindsor
@jamiewindsor 6 ай бұрын
Thanks. I find I'm shooting more on my phone these days, and I've seen some amazing work from phone photographers. Mark Fearnley is a good one to check out. Sometimes he shoots on a Leica, sometimes on his phone. He doesn't seem to be bothered by which one he uses, just what is the easiest to use at the time (and of course, I made a whole video on phone photography).
@j._san
@j._san 3 ай бұрын
This is so helpful to me as a beginner photographer! Guess I'll have a new KZbinr to binge watch.
@DennisSantos
@DennisSantos 6 ай бұрын
What a brilliant way to explain DoF, done in a thoughtful relaxing way. Pleasure to watch.
@Smollie1
@Smollie1 5 ай бұрын
This is a masterclass in creating an engaging teaching video
@VincentStevenStudio
@VincentStevenStudio 6 ай бұрын
I figured this out when wanting to take travel pictures. You want your subject and Mt Rushmore, for example, both in focus. Or you want your subject and the Eiffel tower both in focus. Since most people just use their phones for these type of pics, they dont think about depth of field.
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