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enlarge | Author: Bryan Peterson Publisher: Amphoto Books Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $12.83 You Save: $12.12 (49%)
New (26) Used (7) from $12.35
Avg. Customer Rating: 27 reviews Sales Rank: 1137
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 160 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.2 x 0.5
ISBN: 0817463011 Dewey Decimal Number: 771 EAN: 9780817463014 ASIN: 0817463011
Publication Date: April 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Shutter SpeedsTechnique August 24, 2008
Very good book especially for beginning photographers. The author explains how various shutter speeds can create different effects with each image. The author shows this with numerous photographs throughout the book. Well written and easy to understand for any level of photographer.
Very informative August 3, 2008 Bryan Peterson's books have always been very interesting, and Understanding Shutter Speed definitely is his best book to date. Like his previous books, he writes very clearly and the sample photos are beautiful! I would buy this book again just for the photos. It takes photography to another level by showing the readers how easy it is to be creative using different shutter speeds. If you want to learn to take all those action filled shots that you thought only professionals can do, buy this book and discover that you can do it yourself!
Muy buen libro de fotografia, buenos tips, buenas ideas July 31, 2008 Habia comprado el libro anterior del mismo autor, "Entendiendo la exposicion" y quedé muy satisfecho con la compra. Ambos libros los recomiendo 100%, yo los compré desde Chile y para mi valieron la pena el envio que es bastante costoso comparado con el valor del libro mismo.
Short and to the point July 30, 2008 I already own previous titles from this author " Understanding Exposure", "Learning to See Creatively", " Beyond Portraiture" and " Understanding Digital Photography". This book is very similar: it contains great pictures as examples, it contains short text paragraphs that can be read and understood separately and it provides useful tips and examples.
It is unfortunate that some of the pictures are re-used from previous titles. This also happened in his previous titles. I fail to understand why Peterson does this. Being a photographer for so many years, he surely has enough photos available to be able to exemplify without such re-use of material.
Nonetheless, the pictures are AMAZING and worth alone buying the book. The tips are very useful.
I like the style very much and appreciate the fact that the text is short and without useless "filler text".
Be Willing to Think Outside the Box July 12, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I read Bryan's first book, "Understanding Exposure" and thought it was one of the best photography books writtens. Therefore, when he came out with this one I didn't buy it because I didn't want to be disappointed with rehashes of photos I already saw or he just added a few points to concepts already covered in other books.
I was on a photo safari when someone told me how much they enjoyed the book. Therefore, I decided to buy it. I was pleasantly surprised to see how he took something as basic as "shutter speed" and successfully held my interest for the entire book.
Bryan categorizes the book based on the shutter speed. These range from the speeds that freeze action (1/1000, 1/500, 1/250), to the slower ones that emphasize motion.
The books value is in the use of the slower speeds. There is not much to learn about taking images at the faster speeds that freeze action.
I give credit because he didn't just provide a bunch of pictures of the cliche slow shutter images (i.e., waterfalls and people walking). Instead, he shows you how to allow the moving subjects to paint the picture. My favorites examples are the boats in the water and the fields of grass. In these examples, he shows the typical image taken a faster speeds. Next, he shows how slowing the shutter speed allows the objects to move slightly thus producing very interesting photos.
I've taken photos of flowers in the past. I used to get upset because I couldn't use a fast enough shutter speed when I increased my aperture for greater depth of focus without increasing my ISO. In retrospect, I could've used a slower shutter speed to emphasize the motion and create more colorful images. This only works if one dares to try something different.
In conclusion, Bryan does an excellent job of showing you how to creatively use what you already know.
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