Be Cool, Stay in School
So I’m pretty excited! I just got back from a class that was offered by my local camera store. It was called SLR Essentials and turned out to be pretty cool. I wasn’t the most clueless person in the place and I learned some things that I didn’t know. I am still trying to grasp some of the concepts and make sure I understand them.
Some things I learned:
SLR = Single Lens Reflex. Basically, because of mirrors, you are seeing through your view finder, exactly what the lens is seeing. On your old school point and shoots your view finder is above your lens and so what you see is not exactly what the lens sees. Now a days with these new-fangled digital point and shoot cameras that really isn’t an issue because you can use your LCD screen to see what the lens sees and rarely use the view finder. Hmmm…. I didn’t know that!
Aperture (also called F/Stops) is the size of the hole in your lens that you or your camera can choose. The larger the number, the smaller the hole. Small f/stop number needs a fast shutter speed. So in other words, if the number is small then the hole is large. You would want your shutter to move quickly so that your photo doesn’t get totally saturated with light and ends up blown out or over exposed.
Shutter Speed are fractions of a second that the aperture is left open. So if you are trying to capture an action shot of say… your daughter chasing after the greased pig at the local 4th of July celebration (seriously I saw this event last year at my aunt’s town Independence Day celebration!!! I thought it was some old tyme story and no one really did that anymore. They do. It was awesome!). You are going to want to use a wide opening in your lens, a.k.a a small f/stop number and a fast shutter speed. This will capture your sweet girly in all her greasy glory with out any blurry movement images.
Yay!!! I get it!!! Now to translate that to my camera… That is going to take some practice.
I also learned something else. I haven’t told you about my cameras yet. I have two; a Nikon Coolpix 3500 and also a Nikon D100. One is a point and shoot (this one is pretty hammered. It’s been dropped a lot and my 4 year old takes pictures with it all the time), and the other is a digital SLR. Apparently we’re a Nikon family. I don’t know why. However, I will still love you if you are a Sony, Olympus, Canon, Fujitsu or any-other-camera-brand-I-can’t-think-of family. It’s just the way we roll over here at our abode.
Here’s the thing… the D100 is about 5 years old. It’s big. It’s actually my husband’s. He bought it for work a million years ago and when that job ended he got to keep the camera. I have always called it Ben’s (that’s my hubby’s name) Camera. It was his. Until now. I’ve stolen it from him. I am claiming it and have begun to learn how to use it. I was a little afraid that it was too old and that technology was so much more advanced that the camera would be obsolete. Tonight I learned that it is not. It still rocks. It is still an awesome camera and I am super stoked to learn how to use it.
I may have had the oldest camera in the class but it is still an awesome camera. It may not be able to shoot 12 megapixels but 6 megapixels is still capturing some pretty incredible images and clarity. It can do SO MANY THINGS!!! I am so excited to learn that camera inside and out.
I made a goal tonight on my way home from this class: I will learn the Nikon D100 inside and out. I will learn how to use all the features on it and I will become a good photographer!
So really, I guess that is two goals. But they are good goals. I will stop coveting the D40X and be very happy with my D100. By time I have mastered this camera, I will perhaps have enough pennies saved up to buy the newest hotness on the market. And then my pennies won’t be spent in vain. I won’t be one of those women in my class who had the coolest newest camera on the market and didn’t now anything about it. Anything!!! I will earn that camera.
So what’s the moral of my story today? I guess the moral is: Take a class at your local camera store. You might be surprised by what you learn. My class was only $20 and I feel that I got a really good value. I feel like I know my camera a little better and am excited to take a bunch of shots tomorrow at the zoo.













June 4th, 2008 at 3:29 pm
Nice entry.
Love your banter about the greasy pig. Sorry, here you are introducing the technical beauty of snapshots and here I am congratulating you on your fun and clever way of talking about bacon.
I will cleave to the story’s moral and take a class. I have to, we have a (not-very-cheap) camera and I have not even tapped into it’s wealth.
Way to GO! I am excited for this!