- Don't gain the world at the expense of your soul: personally engage.
- How to control light with a point-and shoot camera, avoiding "exposure modes from Hell"
- Using pre-visualization as a key photographic skill.
- Making the mundane fantastic - using composition to avoid boring family pictures.
- Photographing children for the precious individuals they are
- Leaving the shoe box behind...Displaying and preserving photos in the digital era.
He'll also include some material on his work and blog, www.photoblog2.com and leave time for Q&A.
Attendance is limited, so register now. We'll send you a reminder before the webcast. And please feel free to share this invitation with others.
Date: Wednesday, March 18 at 10 am PT
Price: Free
Duration: Approximately 60 minutes
To register: http://oreilly.com/go/takephotos
Questions? Please send email to webcast@oreilly.com
About Harold Davis
Harold Davis is a photographer and author. His photographs have been
widely published, exhibited, and collected. Many of his fine art
photography posters are well known, including some recent alternatively
processed digital flower images published by New York Graphic Society.
The author of more than twenty books, Harold has written (and illustrated with his photographs) Digital Photography: Digital Field Guide (Wiley), The Photographer's Guide to Yosemite and the High Sierra (Countryman/W.W.Norton), 100 Views of the Golden Gate (Wilderness Press). He is the lead author of a new series of books about digital photography from O'Reilly Digital Media.
Harold writes the popular Photoblog 2.0, www.photoblog2.com, which covers aesthetic, technical, and personal issues related to digital photography. He is the creator of the Digital Night website.
About O’Reilly
O’Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, and conferences. Since 1978, O’Reilly Media has been a chronicler and catalyst of cutting-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by amplifying “faint signals” from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism.