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How to Do Everything with Your Digital Camera (HTDE)
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ASIN:
0072230819
Avg Rating [4.5 Stars] 10 Reviews
Pub. Nov-2003;
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£14.99
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Authors/Performers ------------------ Dave Johnson;
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A great and easy to follow book ( like all in the series)
A shame it will go out of date quickly as cameras become more powerful;
[Rating: 4 Stars]
I wish that I had found this book when I first started digital photography. Although I had been using a 35 mm film camera for many years, Cannon SLR plus lenses, there are differences and it is finding the differences and how to use them to best advantage that is important. This book spells it all out for novice and more advanced users alike. Most of the requisite skills are well covered. There are one or two omissions, whether by accident or design I do not know, but they do not detract from the book as a whole. If you have just started out on the digital experience, or are contemplating so doing, this is the book that is worth buying. There are many books at far higher prices that just do not cover the subject matter so well. As has been said in another review, it also covers Paint Shop Pro and this is a far more likely purchase than Photoshop, costing as it does, merely a fraction of the price of Photoshop and for many people, just as good. My advice is, buy it. you will not regret it.;
[Rating: 5 Stars]
For the beginner to the world of digital cameras, this is an excellent introductory book. It won't teach you how to become a professional photographer - but for the keen amateur, it'll show you how to get the best from the camera.Nice, simple explanations, with clear diagrams of: why shutter speed makes a difference; what an Aperture is; and so on. The example shots are more 'my kids in the yard' than 'snows over Kathmandu'. But then, that's the kind of shots most of us are going to take, so it makes sense in this context. It is very useful to have a book which covers editing images using PaintShopPro, which I suspect is much more commonly used among amateur photographers that the PhotoShop that other books assume you have. I think I will be referring to this section of the book more than any other. The absence of colour illustration seems odd in a book about photography, though the black-and-white examples are clear enough to show what is being explained. (I have the 2001 edition of this book, the later reprint may vary.);
[Rating: 4 Stars]
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