Thursday, 9 December 2010

Popular Photography's 2010 Camera of the Year and More!

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December 9, 2010

Breaking news from America's top photo magazines

From the Forums: What are your thoughts on the NYU professor who had the camera implanted into the back of his head?
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Popular Photography American Photo

2010 Camera of the Year: Sony A55
The decision of our editors was unanimous: It could only be Sony’s unique take on the single-lens reflex.


Video: Canon's Locking Mode Dial Mod for 5D Mark II
See what the $100 upgrade will get you.



How To: Use Fog and Mist to Your Advantage in Landscape Photography
Fog, mist, smoke and haze can all act as an excellent natural filter.



Professor Has Camera Implanted In the Back of His Own Head
That's one way to skip the camera strap.

Photo of the Day

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TECH SUPPORT

Did You Know: Lighting Ratios

A common way to describe both quantity and quality of light is the lighting ratio. It indicates the amount of light (in stops) that illuminates the highlights compared with the shadows. The first number in the ratio refers to the key or mainlight; the second to the shadows or fill light. The closer the two numbers are to each other (e.g., 1:1), the flatter the overall lighting. The more they vary (e.g., 4:1), the higher the overall contrast.

Lighting ratios can help you retain detail. If your camera’s sensor can capture a 6-stop range of highlight-to-shadow detail, and your scene has a lighting ratio of 7:1, you must drop light levels in the highlights or add light to the shadows until you reach a 6:1 ratio. Ratios can be determined with in-camera spotmeters, but handheld flash meters such as sekonic’s l-358 can be easier—their manuals explain how in step-by-step instructions.


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