I love taking pictures of food.
Over at 1x umrühren bitte, a new montly blog event, food-o-grafie, about food photography is just starting up. I hope I'll get to see a lot of beautiful shots. First round, however, is about the cameras themselves.
My current camera is a Canon EOS 400D,
which is also my first digital SLR camera. I didn't buy it specifically
for food photography, although it seems this is what it is being used
for, most of the time.
As I have no previous experience with SLR cameras, I really have
nothing to compare it with. I love it, but it's big and bulky (compared
to a compact, at least). I still only have the lens that came with
camera (18-55 mm). Guess I should learn to work with that before buying
more lenses. Would love a macro lens, though. And a wide angle lens. And a...
For
the last few years, my interest in taking photos has grown quite a bit,
so in April this year, I decided to finally buy myself some decent
equipment. After endless researches on the internet, and asking my
camera-savvy sister, it came down to a choice between the Canon and the
Nikon D40. My sister had just bought the Nikon. So I bought the Canon
(how trivial that my choice should be determined by plain old sibling
rivalry).
Since then, I've tried to get a grip on a lot of terms
that I was previously blissfully unaware of - such as ISO, aperture,
shutter speed and RAW vs. jpg...
I'm still struggling, so I've
thought of taking a photo course, just to get the basics right. Until
then, I'm just experimenting and taking lots of photos. 95% of them get
the delete-treatment. 5% are reasonably okay, but always get a free
trip to Photoshop-land before being shown to anyone. But I'm getting
better. Here is a close-up of some pomegranate seeds. They look like little rubies.