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nyfoto Says:
Sep 28, 2008 - thanks for the great video. photochimper(dot)com
ZioZambe Says:
Oct 9, 2008 - So remember: 1 - Use the crappiest camera on the market, as long as Canon pays you to make it look great 2 - Wear sunglasses, expose and take your shots with them on 3 - Never take more than a second to compose the picture. 4 - Disable autofocus beep and possibly disable autofocus itself 4 - Never use bracketing or a polarizer to get detail in that burned white sky: with RAW you'll just be fine 5 - "All rules are meant to be broken", and this very one makes no exception so stick with the rules
anticimexxx Says:
Nov 1, 2008 - Rick, pleas stop trying to be professional. If you want to know how to photograph correctly, go ask Art Wolfe. Adios
xSharktastic Says:
Nov 2, 2008 - The rocks are red, yet he manages to make them look like regular rocks in his photo's
clone5 Says:
Nov 3, 2008 - Praying to Jesus to take it away :-D pls try it when you have a day off work
Cermait Says:
Nov 7, 2008 - What a complete hack.
vgasparis Says:
Nov 7, 2008 - ahaha god i laughed to tears reading your comment xD
vgasparis Says:
Nov 7, 2008 - rofl the name of the game is fill the frame...and i like how he pretends taking a photo at the end of every scene...
ZioZambe Says:
Nov 7, 2008 - I'm glad it was funny :)
MauriceFlower Says:
Nov 11, 2008 - He, he, he! You are hard on Rick Sammon. But you have a few good points there.
britsy13 Says:
Nov 15, 2008 - hahahaha good point!
djonnem Says:
Nov 28, 2008 - lol, the sunglasses give him away for sure!
LEXPIX Says:
Nov 29, 2008 - Good tips. Seeing the light is one of the most important elements IMHO. Without light there is no image.
hfzwoopah Says:
Dec 1, 2008 - what does RAW means?
NIGHTMAREuki Says:
Dec 3, 2008 - Raw is a format type, jpeg is compressed format, so if you want to edit your pictures or fix them later on, like exposure, contrast and colors ets. you will want to shoot raw so you don't loose any quality. i personally shoot RAW + jpeg most the time
RayHorns Says:
Dec 3, 2008 - okay so what editing system do u have i cant find one that removes a person or object out of the image what do i do
BGathercole Says:
Dec 3, 2008 - Hi. The most common way is with Adobe Photoshop. There are a few tools within the software that can move or remove objects and other elements. The main tool is the 'Clone Stamp' tool. You simply select an area of the image (or another image) you wish to clone and paint over the object you wish to remove. It takes time and practice to use but the results can be great. Hope this helped?
kpear59 Says:
Dec 5, 2008 - Lol, I laughed at the object in the background part. Good video, it helped
l33thustla Says:
Dec 10, 2008 - haha he's fast like a Ferrari when he's talking...
21BoyBoy Says:
Dec 14, 2008 - if i am shooting at f/4.5 or f/5.6, how do i get everything in focus?
PartTimePhotography Says:
Dec 19, 2008 - Good stuff - I'll pass this along to all my newsletter subscribers.
allanmartins Says:
Dec 24, 2008 - simply awesome! +fav
falcoperegrinus82 Says:
Dec 31, 2008 - idk, I always thought to make sure you get all background and foreground elements in focus, use the smallest aperture possible which may necessitate a tripod.
pattabhivety Says:
Jan 3, 2009 - this is good



Codenamebravo Says:
Sep 24, 2008 - I have been a photographer for years and also swear by these rules, good to see someone on here who knows what he is talking about.