It’s been months—perhaps more than a year—since
I last pulled out my DSLR to actually shoot. I use a pocket camera for all my
on-the-fly photos—particularly the ones I take in traffic. The Canon is
reasonably comfortable to use, and it fits in the pocket of my running sweats,
although I really miss having a viewfinder. Having nothing but that screen
means I’m guessing about what’s in the shot and what’s in focus when there’s
glare.
But Autumn-Winter-Spring are prime photography
seasons, and I decided I just needed to get back in practice. So I hauled out
the Nikon, charged the battery and…stared at it.
Because I’ve been using what’s essentially a
point-and-shoot for way too long.
So I did what everyone on the planet with connectivity
and a problem would do: I consulted YouTube. And, glory be, I found all kinds of tutorials on how to use this
model. I uncovered settings and functions that what Nikon is pleased to call
user documentation never bothered with.
Now, look, I learned to shoot on a Nikon
rangefinder (which inspired the name of this blog). No through-the-lens
metering; I carried around a light meter to calculate appropriate settings. And
I did not do badly with it. And for years, my Minolta SLR served me well—through-the-lens
metering, but not a lot of other bells or whistles. When I decided to move into
the digital age—ten years ago; I wanted to see if this whole thing had legs—I didn’t
spend a lot of cycles on it. I did take one Nikon 101 class through Seattle’s
Open University equivalent, but…
In my defense, I do not use the Nikon as a
point-and-shoot; I typically set it either to Shutter or Aperture mode, not Don’t-Worry-Your-Pretty-Little-Head-Honey.
But I’ve never pushed it.
However, YouTube had my back. In a couple of 20-
to 30-minute sessions last weekend, I learned heaps—enough to head out
yesterday in full Manual, and play around with a bunch of different functions.
And here’s the thing: whether it’s photography
(or specific photographic equipment), cooking, home improvement, auto repair,
whatever—there’s a multitude of YouTube videos to walk you through it. In the
past month, I’ve checked out how to use the Instant Pot to make soup, what I
need in order to mount hardware and hang curtains and how to fix a hissing
toilet. Yes—as with everything on the Internet—you’ll find crackpots there, and
I recommend checking out several “experts” to validate their instructions. But,
man—what a resource.
So, today I’m grateful for YouTube’s how-to
videos. Because of them, my first foray out into the neighborhood with the
Nikon netted 100 photos, 94 of which are decent enough to keep. And I had a great
time playing with the settings.
Here’s a keeper:
And here’s the one I completely overexposed—which I kind of like:
Now—maybe there are some videos for the Canon…
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