I just put in practice the "get close and embrace the distortion" motto, last week when shooting with a 16-35mm lens. A game changer for me. This video just reassured me that I am on the right path of getting better while enjoying what we do.
Thanks for doing this video, Mark. I enjoy learning from your mistakes. "Scene stuffing" is something I always try to catch myself from doing when I shoot ultrawide.
Dear Mark, thank you for this video and especially for the nice set of landscape examples! I loved them! As for the lighthouse picture, I would do exactly opposite cropping: I would cut off the left part of the frame almost up (or up) to the place where the road starts being visible after passing the trees... I mention this just to confirm that 1) wide angle shooting gives us space to fine-tune the picture even in the case it was not framed perfectly and 2) photography as an art is about personal taste of photographer and his vision and mood at the moment of shooting and processing. Many thanks for your work again!
I'm not a beginner but I made a HUGE rookie mistake yesterday evening photographing the sunset...LOw to the ground, long exposure over water & rocks...New landscape tripod with no center column...GREAT for this to the ground shots....BUT...Make sure to look carefully that your TRIPOD LEG isn't in the shot! LOL The legs on my new tripod are a bit longer than my older tripod so I'm still getting used to that. Plus I was under exposing the shot a bit to save the highlights so the shadows closer to me were a bit dark in the view screen. Luckily I saw it when I was looking at the shot while getting ready to go to the next shot. I was able to reset and take it again!
Another great informative video Mark. my first wide zoom was a Tamron 10-24mm. Nowadays I have started taking my tablet with me, especially when I am away for a couple of days and what I like to do is get to the area of interest as early as possible take an extreme wide angle shot or two, then send the image to the tablet over the built in wi-fi connection between tablet and camera, this way I can examine the image on the bigger screen (10.1" tablet compared to the 3" on the back of the camera) then begin to roughly break down the wide view image into smaller individual images, so when the light is better and it is time to take the actual photographs, either by zooming in with the wide-angle zoom lens or changing to a bigger lens. Although in saying that, I sometimes forget and still try to cram it all into one or two images.
Hi Mark. It was first time when I saw your video and must say that the amount of knowledge is amazing! I have Nikkor 10-20 ultra wide lens and I love it. It gives me a freedom to show exactly what I want to show. But there are many traps using such lenses which you mentioned in this video. I need to watch your other videos. It looks like I finally found the channel which contains usefull informations with examples. looking forward for next videos. Cheers
Thanks Mark, for the warnings on the wide angle lens. I have one but not used it yet so I will now do those intresting low and close to good use, next time I go out will have the wide angle Nikon 12-24mm in my bag. Great subject and good info.
Nice video, relaxed and to the point. Also good point with the composition and trying to put too much in the picture, less is more...never thought about it
Thanks Mark, another great educational video. I gain knowledge from each video and often think about methods you suggested while framing for a shot. Like spending more time to find the best composition.
Hi Mark, this is the kind of video that makes you pay attention to every photograph you take. Thanks a lot ! Let me ask you something, does photo stacking always requires a tripod ? Thanks. Juan
Just ordered the Tamron 10-24mm lens. First attempt at wide angle lens. Your video was excellent and has given me some food for thought on practicing with the new lens once I receive it.
So true! I recently purchased a wide-angle lens 10-20 (15-30 in 35mm equivalent) and found that most of my first pictures were taken at 10mm... Thank you Mark, great video!
Thank you for this video for many reasons as I am reentering the world of photography again with fervency. Another thank you for the awareness that this video's generosity and how the thumbs down is so bogus and arbitrary on so many people's channel. This video was informative, kind, honest and generous - thank you - liked and subscribed.
Confronted by a scene that can't be captured with a single exposure, some folks stitch several exposures together to form a panorama. I learned the hard way that it doesn't work to make a panorama shot with exposures from a wide angle lens. The wide lens introduces distortions that make it impossible to use them for a panorama.
Yup. I've successfully stitched images at 35mm FF equiv, but anything wider than that and your pano program either gives up or the results are very poor. (Tip: Taking portrait orientation images work great for effective panos.)
Thank you for your tips on landscape photography. I am a newbie at photography but I do aspire to create some beautiful images as the ones in your video.
Thanks again Mark...... I am heading out this weekend for some Colorado Aspen fall pics and planned on using my Tamron 15-30 and now I know how to use it .... thanks!
My first (and only) lens is the Nikon DX 18-135 mm f3.5-5.6. To be perfectly honest it suits my needs well enough and I will hopefully be purchasing a fast prime lens to improve my portraits soon. Much love Mark keep up the good work.
Learning a lot from your videos and your teaching style !!! Thank you. I am also impressed with the production quality of your videos, including sound. I don't see a lapel mic, so I am curious how you are doing sound and how you light your studio. Please keep the content coming . Next stop will be 1 mil. subscribers!!!
I started very wide 14-24 and cropped a lot, then I progressed to a 24-70 and cropped, then to a 70-200 and cropped a little bit, now I use a 80-400mm and dont very often crop at all
Great show, Thanks!!!!!! The color range is unbelievable. I’d sure love to go out and take the same images with my Canon and see the contrast. I’m very impressed with your new camera!!!!!!
I literally slapped myself on the head when you said don’t forget to shoot vertical. I visited line rock in Utah and the photo I took of it was amazing but I always felt like it was missing something. Looking back at it I’m starting to think if I shot it in vertical it would’ve been *chefs kiss*
WOW... Now that's what I call a lot of ideas and great knowledge to learn and work with, Mark... Thank you very much.. Never a dull moment.. I'm studying a Photography book written by Michael Freeman... Just part of my every day learning skills venture... Thanks Mark.. Stay safe.. Neville..
There ideas you mentioned resonated with me. You talk about leaving your wide angle lens at 16mm and using it as a prime. I recently bought a 15mm prime, manual focus lens and I'm afraid it will make me lazy. Lock the focus on infinity and take the picture. I don't think that is good. The second thing is about not showing parts of what you ae seeing. I tell clients when I'm shooting their houses that I am really good at not shooting things. It always makes them relax. The third thing is I feel locked into landscape rather than portrait and I need to get over it.
Thanks for great, and informative video. I am curious as to the camera attachment that you were using to create these vertical shots? It looks handier than a ball head. Thank you!
Mark, very timely video. I found myself doing the same and took notes and will definitely be trying your hints and tips as I head out to shoot foliage this fall both in my local area in Western New York and on a trip through the Berkshire mountains of Western Massachusetts
Oh my God, that last waterfall with the moss covered rocks....beautiful! I have been trying to focus stack, but get lost in photoshop! Afraid I'll mess up the original.
wiki.panotools.org/Enfuse might help. Forget photoshop. Develop your raws with rawtherapee to tiff or png (16 bit) then go from there. Beware! Enfuse is command line ;)
I love shooting with my Tokina 11-16mm lens and usually stick to 11mm. I get some great results, but do find that I have the same issues with trying to stuff too much in. Also, when I shoot the night sky at 11mm, it shows off the distortion on the edges and there's no easy way to fix it, so i need to crop it.
Great tips! I did a shoot at that same waterfall recently and getting up close and personal with a big rock to make a more interesting foreground gave me a more interesting result than just capturing the falls itself. (Although it’s one of the prettiest waterfalls I’ve ever seen!) I wouldn’t have known to do that if it weren’t for photographers like you sharing so many insights on UA-cam!
Very informative, thank you! I haven’t liked the images from my 16-35mm and I think I’ve been making these mistakes. Going to use it more now and probably will be happier with the results 👍🏻
HI Mark, really enjoyed the video. Do you possibly have a tutorial explaining how you get this "satiny" - soft but still crisp look in your landscape photos?
Yet again another awesome video Mark 👌🏻 I'm planning on getting out to one of our beautiful beaches here in Sydney Australia 🇦🇺this weekend and put to practise getting down lower and focus stacking. Fantastic tips once again mate, much appreciated 👍
What was your first lens?
Canon 24-105 Zoom, was nice but heavy :)
18-150 mm EF-M and the 22MM f/2.0 EF-M for the canon M50
Tamron 70-200mm G2 for my nikon Z6
First lens was my 18-55mm that came with my camera. After that was a 70-300mm
My first lens was a pentacon 50mm 1.8 that I bought used for 30 bucks. That's what started my (still small) vintage lens collection :)
Awesome video again! I love how you make yourself “vulnerable” by being upfront about the mistakes you made. Thank you for being yourself.
I just put in practice the "get close and embrace the distortion" motto, last week when shooting with a 16-35mm lens. A game changer for me. This video just reassured me that I am on the right path of getting better while enjoying what we do.
Glad to hear it was helpful!
You have explained in a simple way how to use wide angle lens and make landscape photography look really beautiful.
that flatline tip, absolutely great! thank you for your generosity and willingness on sharing these tips Mark
The best channel ever where learning from one's mistakes is the best way to improve one's photography skills
i prefer the un-cropped lighthouse picture, it depicts the loneliness of the lighthouse, the Moab one was great wide too.
I was going to say the exact same thing about the lighthouse. It added emotion.
Very good information! Thank you very much.
Great video. Thanks Mark!
Thanks for sharing this Mark! Great video!
Quite helpful advice. Well done. Thanks.
Great video. 2 takeaways for me. Edge patrol and the sign on the wall that says Slow Down.
Thanks for doing this video, Mark. I enjoy learning from your mistakes. "Scene stuffing" is something I always try to catch myself from doing when I shoot ultrawide.
I’m learning so much from your videos. Thanks very much Mark.
Fantastic video Mark!....added the bracketing video to my list of videos to watch...TY!
Thanks so much - hope you enjoy it!
"getting low". it's really great advice.
Your honesty and passionis appreciated. Thanks for sharing your expereince.
Thank you so much. I just bought my 17-35 mm Nikkor lens. These tips will help me making better photo.
Enjoy your video. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.
Love the thoughtfulness put into your set design for theses videos.
Really appreciate that Chris - thank you!
I always learn something new from your videos! Thank you!
Dear Mark, thank you for this video and especially for the nice set of landscape examples! I loved them! As for the lighthouse picture, I would do exactly opposite cropping: I would cut off the left part of the frame almost up (or up) to the place where the road starts being visible after passing the trees... I mention this just to confirm that 1) wide angle shooting gives us space to fine-tune the picture even in the case it was not framed perfectly and 2) photography as an art is about personal taste of photographer and his vision and mood at the moment of shooting and processing. Many thanks for your work again!
I love your examples and listening to your thought process while making corrections. Great video!
Awesome information... Thank You!!! Love your videos...
I'm not a beginner but I made a HUGE rookie mistake yesterday evening photographing the sunset...LOw to the ground, long exposure over water & rocks...New landscape tripod with no center column...GREAT for this to the ground shots....BUT...Make sure to look carefully that your TRIPOD LEG isn't in the shot! LOL The legs on my new tripod are a bit longer than my older tripod so I'm still getting used to that. Plus I was under exposing the shot a bit to save the highlights so the shadows closer to me were a bit dark in the view screen. Luckily I saw it when I was looking at the shot while getting ready to go to the next shot. I was able to reset and take it again!
Thank you very much again for yet another informative and helpful video.
Glad to do it friend!
Just noticed the Sony Sport Walkman on the desk! Hahah. Love the vids. Keep it up.
With this video you have earned my subscription. More tips for beginners please, great content! :)
Nice advice ! Thanks
A great way to learn Mark, by watching your videos. Thanks for sharing.
I’m glad you think so Dave!
great video, i really appreciate learning from your shared observations and tips every week, thanks Mark.
Thanks so much!
Another great informative video Mark. my first wide zoom was a Tamron 10-24mm. Nowadays I have started taking my tablet with me, especially when I am away for a couple of days and what I like to do is get to the area of interest as early as possible take an extreme wide angle shot or two, then send the image to the tablet over the built in wi-fi connection between tablet and camera, this way I can examine the image on the bigger screen (10.1" tablet compared to the 3" on the back of the camera) then begin to roughly break down the wide view image into smaller individual images, so when the light is better and it is time to take the actual photographs, either by zooming in with the wide-angle zoom lens or changing to a bigger lens. Although in saying that, I sometimes forget and still try to cram it all into one or two images.
Excellent, as always!
Many thanks!
Very GOOD videos
As always really well put across and very valuable tips, many thanks Mark.
Thank ya Ross!
Hi Mark. It was first time when I saw your video and must say that the amount of knowledge is amazing! I have Nikkor 10-20 ultra wide lens and I love it. It gives me a freedom to show exactly what I want to show. But there are many traps using such lenses which you mentioned in this video. I need to watch your other videos. It looks like I finally found the channel which contains usefull informations with examples. looking forward for next videos. Cheers
Great Video! It makes me a better photographer. Trank you for this! Jan
Great tips, thanks for sharing!
Thanks John!
Great learnings!
Thanks Mark, for the warnings on the wide angle lens. I have one but not used it yet so I will now do those intresting low and close to good use, next time I go out will have the wide angle Nikon 12-24mm in my bag. Great subject and good info.
Great tips using a wide angle lens which I will put into practice, thanks Mark.
Glad you think so!
VERTICAL all DAY !!! another great video
Interesting with my wide angle zooms I always find myself zooming in all the way, I'm a telephoto kinda guy
Great information Mark!! As always, thanks for sharing! 🙂
Thanks Patty!
Nice video, relaxed and to the point. Also good point with the composition and trying to put too much in the picture, less is more...never thought about it
Great vid, Mark. Yes I too thought "wide angle = wide area" capture only. Much more selective today.
Great tips sir 👍 I've learned a lot from this video 👏
Thanks Mark, another great educational video. I gain knowledge from each video and often think about methods you suggested while framing for a shot. Like spending more time to find the best composition.
One quote I remember very well because it sums up things very nicely: Wide angle photography is close up photography.
Thank you very much and good luck
ABDR ! Glad to do it!
I will use some of this knowledge here in the Philippines.
Hi Mark, this is the kind of video that makes you pay attention to every photograph you take. Thanks a lot !
Let me ask you something, does photo stacking always requires a tripod ? Thanks.
Juan
Just ordered the Tamron 10-24mm lens. First attempt at wide angle lens. Your video was excellent and has given me some food for thought on practicing with the new lens once I receive it.
I need this information, thank you.
Thanks a million Patricia!
Very informative video
Cristal clear. I'll keep that in mind once I'll use the 16mm I'm gonna get for Xmas. My actual lens is a 24-105mm F.4. Got a Lumix S1R. Cheers
Learning a lot from you Mark. Wonderful videos and extremely helpful insights on a number of topics!
Music to my ears - thank you Jerry!
So true! I recently purchased a wide-angle lens 10-20 (15-30 in 35mm equivalent) and found that most of my first pictures were taken at 10mm... Thank you Mark, great video!
Thank you for this video for many reasons as I am reentering the world of photography again with fervency. Another thank you for the awareness that this video's generosity and how the thumbs down is so bogus and arbitrary on so many people's channel. This video was informative, kind, honest and generous - thank you - liked and subscribed.
The window in the background is doing a pretty good job of face recognition ;)
Confronted by a scene that can't be captured with a single exposure, some folks stitch several exposures together to form a panorama. I learned the hard way that it doesn't work to make a panorama shot with exposures from a wide angle lens. The wide lens introduces distortions that make it impossible to use them for a panorama.
Yup. I've successfully stitched images at 35mm FF equiv, but anything wider than that and your pano program either gives up or the results are very poor. (Tip: Taking portrait orientation images work great for effective panos.)
Love that pic at corona arch…miss that place
Thank you for your tips on landscape photography. I am a newbie at photography but I do aspire to create some beautiful images as the ones in your video.
Thanks so much for the kind words Patricia!
Love the violet background
Great video! Learning a lot. Love the shirt.
Thanks so much!
Wow, great sound !!!
Well explained how to get best out of wide angle lens while landscape photography.
Thanks so much for watching!
Thanks again Mark...... I am heading out this weekend for some Colorado Aspen fall pics and planned on using my Tamron 15-30 and now I know how to use it .... thanks!
Enjoy your trip Ken!
It takes a master in whatever - who can assess his own talents or a certain lack thereof - honestly and correctly.
My first (and only) lens is the Nikon DX 18-135 mm f3.5-5.6. To be perfectly honest it suits my needs well enough and I will hopefully be purchasing a fast prime lens to improve my portraits soon. Much love Mark keep up the good work.
Thanks a million Dominic!
Mark Denney anytime my friend
You are my teacher sir... 🌻
Thank you!
Learning a lot from your videos and your teaching style !!! Thank you. I am also impressed with the production quality of your videos, including sound. I don't see a lapel mic, so I am curious how you are doing sound and how you light your studio. Please keep the content coming . Next stop will be 1 mil. subscribers!!!
AMAZING video..
I love the water blur on the first photo. Just enough to let you 'feel' the waterfall without looking totally fake.
Thanks Wade!
I started very wide 14-24 and cropped a lot, then I progressed to a 24-70 and cropped, then to a 70-200 and cropped a little bit, now I use a 80-400mm and dont very often crop at all
Great show, Thanks!!!!!! The color range is unbelievable. I’d sure love to go out and take the same images with my Canon and see the contrast. I’m very impressed with your new camera!!!!!!
Thanks so much Terry! I am as well!
Fantastic video. And congratulations Kyle. Hope I didn't spell that out wrong.
I just got a Canon EF S 10-22 thanks for your information from your video
Great tips. I try to work each of them into my wide-angle images.
Thank you Roger!
14-24mm f/2.8 mostly for astro, but, you gave me the confidence to tackle the field in daytime, thank you Mark
I literally slapped myself on the head when you said don’t forget to shoot vertical. I visited line rock in Utah and the photo I took of it was amazing but I always felt like it was missing something. Looking back at it I’m starting to think if I shot it in vertical it would’ve been *chefs kiss*
It's one of those, "Wow! I coulda had a V-8"! moments!!
WOW... Now that's what I call a lot of ideas and great knowledge to learn and work with, Mark... Thank you very much.. Never a dull moment.. I'm studying a Photography book written by Michael Freeman... Just part of my every day learning skills venture... Thanks Mark.. Stay safe.. Neville..
Thank you Thank you Thank you Neville!
Thank you so much~! This really helped me get things in the right perspective :) I am just a hobby photographer but I wish to learn more. Subbed :)
Your pictures are amazing!! I'm new to photography. Do I need to use a tripod to take this type photos when using a wide angle lens?
Good info!
There ideas you mentioned resonated with me. You talk about leaving your wide angle lens at 16mm and using it as a prime. I recently bought a 15mm prime, manual focus lens and I'm afraid it will make me lazy. Lock the focus on infinity and take the picture. I don't think that is good. The second thing is about not showing parts of what you ae seeing. I tell clients when I'm shooting their houses that I am really good at not shooting things. It always makes them relax. The third thing is I feel locked into landscape rather than portrait and I need to get over it.
Thanks for great, and informative video. I am curious as to the camera attachment that you were using to create these vertical shots? It looks handier than a ball head. Thank you!
Mark, very timely video. I found myself doing the same and took notes and will definitely be trying your hints and tips as I head out to shoot foliage this fall both in my local area in Western New York and on a trip through the Berkshire mountains of Western Massachusetts
Great to hear the video was helpful Thomas!
I find myself watching your videos with my little memo book that stays in my camera bag... Keep the tips coming
Really happy to hear the videos are helpful!
Love the Walkman
Oh my God, that last waterfall with the moss covered rocks....beautiful! I have been trying to focus stack, but get lost in photoshop! Afraid I'll mess up the original.
wiki.panotools.org/Enfuse might help. Forget photoshop. Develop your raws with rawtherapee to tiff or png (16 bit) then go from there. Beware! Enfuse is command line ;)
Thanks Mark, good advice, just bought the Samyang 14mm for my Fuji. Thanks for sharing
Glad to do it and thanks for checking it out John!
Mark, can you explain a little more on negative space as well as what you mean by a flat image?
Thank you.
I love shooting with my Tokina 11-16mm lens and usually stick to 11mm. I get some great results, but do find that I have the same issues with trying to stuff too much in. Also, when I shoot the night sky at 11mm, it shows off the distortion on the edges and there's no easy way to fix it, so i need to crop it.
For waterfalls, I like to use a vertical approach. Then you can get a lot more of the details
Great tips! I did a shoot at that same waterfall recently and getting up close and personal with a big rock to make a more interesting foreground gave me a more interesting result than just capturing the falls itself. (Although it’s one of the prettiest waterfalls I’ve ever seen!) I wouldn’t have known to do that if it weren’t for photographers like you sharing so many insights on UA-cam!
Thanks Josh - really appreciate that man!
Excellent thanks
THanks Ricky!
Very informative, thank you! I haven’t liked the images from my 16-35mm and I think I’ve been making these mistakes. Going to use it more now and probably will be happier with the results 👍🏻
HI Mark,
really enjoyed the video. Do you possibly have a tutorial explaining how you get this "satiny" - soft but still crisp look in your landscape photos?
Yet again another awesome video Mark 👌🏻 I'm planning on getting out to one of our beautiful beaches here in Sydney Australia 🇦🇺this weekend and put to practise getting down lower and focus stacking. Fantastic tips once again mate, much appreciated 👍
Awesome to hear Shane - enjoy those beautiful beaches!