Picture This: Photography Tips for Travelers
Rick Steves
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Picture This: Photography Tips for Travelers
If my hotel was burning down and I could grab just one thing, it would be my digital camera with its memory card filled with photos.
Every year I ask myself whether it's worth the worry and expense of mixing photography with my travels. Then, after I see my images and re-live my trip through them, the answer is always "Yes!" Here are some tips and lessons that I've learned from the photographic school of hard knocks.
Most people are limited by their skills, not their camera. It helps to understand your equipment before you travel, but ultimately your most valuable tool is a sharp eye connected to a basic understanding of how your camera works. Work through the manual. Then make a point to be creative in your photo safari: Capture striking light, contrasting shades, repeating patterns, interesting textures, bold colors, and intimate close-ups.
Look for a new slant on an old sight. Postcard-type shots are hard to resist, but boring. Everyone knows what the
Capture the personal and intimate details of your trip. Show how you lived, who you met, and what made each day an adventure (a close-up of a picnic, your favorite taxi driver, the character you befriended at the launderette). Those moments -- your moments -- are the ones you'll want to remember.
Vary your perspective. Shoot close, far, low, or high, during the day and at night. Don't fall into the rut of always centering a shot. Use foregrounds to add color, depth, and interest to landscapes.
Maximize good lighting. Bright light at midday will wash out and deaden your pictures. Real photographers wait for the magic hours -- early morning and late afternoon -- when the sun is low and colors glow. I took some of my best photos ever of the gothic statues at
Notice details. Eliminate distractions by zeroing in on your subject. Get so close that you show only one thing. Don't try to show all of something in one shot -- zoom in. People are the most interesting subjects. It takes nerve to walk up to someone and take his or her picture. But if you want some great shots, be nervy. (In any language, point at your camera and ask, "Photo?") Your subject will probably be delighted. Many photographers take a second shot immediately after the first portrait to capture a looser, warmer subject. The famous war photographer
Buildings, in general, are not interesting. It doesn't matter if
Don't be afraid to hand-hold a slow shot in low light. At most museums, you aren't allowed to use a flash or tripod. But if you can lean against a wall, for instance, bipods like you become tripods. Use a self-timer which clicks the shutter more smoothly than your finger can. Many new digital cameras use "image stabilization" to help in low-light situations.
A video camera used to be a big, heavy lug-along. Now, thanks to pocket-sized video cameras -- and the proliferation of video cameras built into smartphones -- shooting and sharing vacation clips is easier than ever.
With cameras getting smaller and smaller, it's tempting to make your trip more photo/video-focused than experiential. Like a hunter on safari, you see everything as photographic prey -- to be captured, or missed. Aside from skewing your priorities, there's nothing that screams "tourist!" like a camera bouncing on your belly. Don't let it become a barrier between you and the people you've traveled so far to connect with. My advice is to be selective, and pull out your camera for special moments. The viewfinder that really matters is the one atop your shoulders.
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(c) 2011 RICK STEVES DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
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