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Proline CD Holder (With 3x3" Cameo Cover Hold 1 Picture)Holds 1 CD |
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Please feel free to browse our list of articles and click on the article name to see the article in full.
Filters Filters are basically special pieces of glass which usually screw into the front of your camera lens and add special effects to the shot. Most filters are designed to be used with lenses which are made for SLR type cameras and there are very few filters made for the basic point and shoot type cameras. This basic rule is changing with the mass introduction of digital cameras but the majority are still used in conjunction with SLR cameras. |
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Developing of black and white films Even though today colour photography is the dominant form, black and white photography is considered an exotic art and has its own takers among photography enthusiasts. There’s an added charm to black and white photography as the shots can be developed at home using a home dark room and some chemicals. |
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Lenses According to Robert Capa, 'If your photographs are not good enough, you are not close enough.' |
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Composition The composition is perhaps the most important consideration in taking a good shot, and that’s what distinguishes a professional photographer from an amateur. As we often get caught-up in the shoot, or the beauty projected by the model. Always keep in mind, first compose, then expose. |
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Printers Printers are generally grouped according to the technology they use to print. The two most basic categories are impact or non-impact. Non-impact printers place ink, or print media, on the paper by some technology other than impact. Printers are classified as impact printers when they form images on paper by striking and pressing a ribbon against a sheet of paper. These printers are noisy, inexpensive, and generally slower than non-impact printers, much of the technology is mechanical. |
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Macro photography Taking close-up pictures of small things is called 'macro photography.' Real macro photography is where you are working around 1:1 ratio and closer thereby giving an image on film that is equal in size or larger than the subject being photographed. To define even more strictly, from 1:1 up to ten times enlargement on film (10:1) is the standard range for macro photography. |
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