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Our mission

“is simply to teach the fundamentals of digital photography to photography enthusiasts, in a holistic, fun & approachable way.”

I Love Photography is all about super fun and educational digital photography courses, photography tips, classes, techniques and photography blog for everyday people who own a digital camera and want to know how to further their knowledge and skills in digital photography.

The I love photography network was started by an award winning portrait and wedding photographer, Emily Hanna of esh photography, because she loves photography and wants to share her 15+ years of experience in the photography industry with others in a simple and friendly way.

What we offer

We offer weekend photography courses, one-on-one tutorial sessions, tips and techniques on our blog and digital photo editing classes.

Gear & Equipment

Cheap lens series: The 35mm prime

What is a 35mm prime lens?

In the world of DSLR lenses the 35mm prime lens is a widely revered one. It is a standard fixed focal length lens with sharp image quality and practical everyday use. Mind you this is not a zoom lens. So, the only way you could zoom is if you move your feet. Too tight a frame? Step back a few paces. Too much negative space around the subject? Step forward for a tighter composition. As you can imagine this is not the type of lens that would make zoomers happy. Prime lenses are designed for optical superiority and they are widely considered as a hard working photographer’s lens.

Prime lenses vs. zoom lenses

You may have heard protographers going ga-ga over the quality of prime lenses. This debate of prime vs. zoom will always find arguments on either side. We are not going to delve too much into this. One thing I would, however, mention is primes are primed (pun intended) for optical superiority. Zoom lenses have too much on their plate and that sometimes tend to weigh down on their performance.

Advantages of the 35m prime

The 35mm prime is considered as a standard prime. The 50mm and the 40mm prime lenses are also considered as standard primes. Standard being close to the focal length of the human eye. While that is just a statement and warrant a much deeper discussion (beyond the purview of this article), consider just this – a standard prime gives us the same angle of view which is roughly the equivalent of the human eye.

35mm prime lenses come optimized for both full-frame 35mm as well as crop sensor powered cameras. Canon currently, however, don’t sell a lens specifically designed for its smaller crop sensor cameras. Nikkor on the other hand does. Having said that EF-S mount cameras can use lenses designed for the EF mount. Thus Canon’s 35mm lenses designed for full-frame cameras work on its smaller sensor cameras.

A 35mm lens when mounted on APS-C sensor based digital cameras gives a slightly smaller angle of view. This happens because of the crop factor. For those who are not aware of this, very quickly, the crop factor denotes what the effective focal length will be when a lens designed for a bigger camera is used on a smaller camera (given the lens mount is compatible). This happens because the sensor behind the lens is only going to use a small portion of the image coming through the lens.

On a Nikon DX format camera the crop factor is 1.5. Which means a 35mm prime becomes a 52mm prime. On a Canon the crop factor is 1.6. It results in the angle of view becoming the same as a 56mm lens mounted on a 35mm camera. Focal lengths (and effective focal lengths) are always expressed in 35mm format terms.

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Ergonomics, weight and build quality

35mm lenses are no-fuss optical tools. They are, as mentioned before, designed for optical superiority and that gives them a real edge compared to zoom lenses. Even the cheapest prime lens will give a well-made zoom lens a run for its money.

35mm primes are lighter compared to zooms that cover the same focal length. This is because zoom lenses are composed of a number of lens elements which enable it to alter the focal length. It also has focusing elements and in some cases image stabilization elements too. On top of it modern auto-focusing lenses have AF motors built into them. All that adds to the bulk. Comparatively, older lenses such as the legendary Nikkon 35mm f/1.4 manual focusing lens has no image stabilization, no auto-focusing motor and no zoom lens elements. It is lighter but is designed with a single purpose – optical superiority. You won’t get anything as sharp and with such beautiful color rendition, even though the lens is more than three decades old!

Maximum aperture

Another benefit of the 35mm prime and for that matter all primes is that they are blessed with fast apertures. Faster apertures does two things. A - They gather more light, which, especially in low light situations, can help you to capture better images sans noise. The second benefit is you can really close down the depth of field to a narrow slit of focus obliterating everything else in the frame. Such shallow depths of field has its own uses in photography. It is capable of producing beautiful bokeh; something that is imperative for isolating a subject from its background.

Long Exposure Photography – A Beginner’s Guide

Long Exposure Photography – A Beginner’s Guide

One of the creative applications for the shutter priority mode is shooting long exposures. Long exposure photography is the art of shooting with long shutter speed. Though it sounds like an oxymoron, long shutter speed is the easy way to express this long exposure photography technique.

Any camera will do, any lens wouldn’t

The phrase above, which also happens to be the title of this article, is an oft used metaphor in photography. It’s used to signify a truth that often is misunderstood, especially by beginners. Ever since DSLR camera and camera lenses came on to the market, it has become ostensibly easy to get into serious photography. Well, at least if you go only by the gear that a photographer wields.

This happened to me and I am sure I am not an exception. I used to think just because I am shooting with a point and shoot camera I will never be able to produce images of the same standard as someone shooting with a professional camera and a bazooka-like lens. Then when I graduated to a DSLR camera, I thought those with medium format cameras are probably shooting even better! Then, when I saw people submitting photos shot with smartphones and getting recognised on National Geographic, my perception changed forever. Now when I think back I feel how naïve I was!

Canberra weekend photography course
from $210.00

This photography course is held over the weekend, starting on Saturday morning and finishing on the Sunday evening.

Contact us and we can arrange a date for a group, or, we will nominate a date that suits once we have enough numbers.

If you want some training now I would be more than happy for some one on one personal lessons.

Day 1 - theory & technical
Day 2 - practical

You can attend only one day if prefer.

Bring your friends and you receive a discount.

1 Friend = 10%, 2 Friends = 15%, 3 Friends = 20%

You can book up to 4 places using this system. For bookings beyond 4 places, please contact us and we can talk to you about a group booking rate.

If you do not have a credit card and can not pay online, please contact us and we will organise payment and registration.

Hit the drop down below to choose days and how many you are booking for and the price will update.

Inspiration is everything

If you are looking for inspiration to shoot great images - get out and get inspired. Don’t just stay indoors watching camera reviews. A digital camera is just a mere box. All it does is capture light the way you dictate it. It can’t and won’t take photos on its own. It does not know whether you are shooting a bush or a rose or the Zhangjiajie forests. It has no brains. It is like an automobile. It might have great features but someone’s still got to drive it.

What about camera lenses?

Now, if you talk about a lens, it is a completely different thing. You may ask why? I don’t suppose a lens has got brains? No it doesn’t. But there is still a significant difference between a lens and a DSLR Camera. The lens is an extension of your eyes. What you see and how you choose to see it translates ultimately into the photo that you make. The lens just helps you to capture that photo. The camera simply records what the lens sees.

Scenario 1

So, let’s say you are standing in front of a meadow with bright yellow sunflowers. Now imagine yourself taking a picture from your eye level. Let’s say with an 18-55mm kit lens set to 50mm. What you get is an image that every other passing tourist or nature lover gets – a disappointing composition of nothingness. Rather than using an 18-55mm lens you should have opted for a wider lens, let’s say a 12-24mm lens set to 12mm and f/8. The wider lens gives a much wider coverage, a greater depth of field and a much sharper image because of the general quality of the lens, which is way better than the kit lens. Of course a few more tricks would have to be used. One of them is shooting from a low angle and keeping one of the sunflowers tack sharp as the focal point of the image. Overall the image quality would be much better.

 

Scenario 2

Let’s say you want to shoot a portrait session with a high-key lighting setup. Let’s add to that a requirement to produce an extremely shallow depth of field. One of the best portrait lenses is the Nikon 135mm f/2 DC. Set at its widest aperture of f/2 you can create an extremely sharp focal point, which without any question should be the eyes of the subject and then blur out the rest of the image. With a kit lens like the 18-55mm with a maximum aperture of f/5.6 at 55mm this would be impossible.

 

 

 

 

Scenario 3

Another example of horses for courses could be the need for macro perspectives. Macro lenses basically increases the gap between the focal plane and the optical center of the lens. The optical center of the lens is where the rays of light emanating from the subject converges. I have covered this topic in detail in another article on this website.

With a macro lens the gap between the optical center and the focal plane increases as such the image becomes magnified. The minimum working distance between the lens and the subject also decreases which allows you to get much closer to the subject. This is something that kit lenses or tele-lenses are incapable of achieving.

Photo tips? Here’s the one you really need to get started

As you have just read, each of the above scenarios required a lens that is tailor-made for it. Thus, buying just one lens or for that matter any lens will not suffice. If you are here looking for digital photography lessons, here’s your first. Don’t spend most of your money on the camera body and then get the cheapest lens you can lay your hands on. Instead, get a reasonable body and then spend a majority of your money on the best lens/lenses you can afford. What to do with the balance amount? Well, that bit will be discussed at some other time in some other article on photo tips.

5 tips to make better portraits indoors (using flash)

5 tips to make better portraits indoors (using flash)

Many of the basic lighting principles of digital photography and other photography tips that we shared in a previous article on outdoor portraits with flash are equally applicable for indoor portraiture. This article looks a few different scenarios for indoor portrait lighting.

All photography is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence | esh photography