I'm a professional photographer and people are always asking me about equipment rather than about technique and exposure. So on a recent trip to Thailand, I set myself a project to prove photography really isn't all about expensive equipment and with a bit of thought anyone can get great images with whatever equipment they have.
I bought a compact digital camera for £5 from Emmaus (a charity helping the homeless). The only stipulation I had was that the camera had to have a degree of control over the exposure. After taking the first few shots I realized that the camera, which was quite old, was struggling with anything other than sunlight. It was giving me a very long exposure and when you used a higher ISO to combat this, to make the camera more light sensitive, it was very grainy. One way around this is to use flash but I really didn't like the results this gave. So I decided to use these limitations to my benefit by using blur, grain, and long exposure as part of the image. This long exposure blur is often called Kinetic Photography.
I'm pleased with the results, they are definitely very different from the images I would have gotten with my expensive Nikon DSLR, but in many ways, I think they are better.
More info: timsimpsonphotography.co.uk
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Floating Bungalows
Khao Sok National Park
2 Stops Under Exposed
Big Buddha Afer A Downpour
View From The Beach Bar
Long Exposure Panning
The Andaman Sea
This one looks like a snapshot from any family vacation photo album
Sunrise
At first glance, the plants look like insects until you realise the scale and subject of the photo.
Mr Heng, Tattoos
Hannah And Yaz In Bangkok
A Fire On The Beach
The Palace
These look like stacked up crocodiles, both on top of each other and lying side by side.
At The Temple
Looking Down Onto The Market
Scooter Spares Shop
Negative Space
At The Beach Bar
Things Look Better In Three's
High Iso Abstract
Elbows Out At The Traffic Lights
Tuk Tuk
Temple
This Gave Me Nightmares
Me too, its all kinds of wrong isn't it!
Load More Replies...Long Exposure Blur
Over Exposure
Street Food
Railway Station, Phuket
Our Guide
Framed Through A Window
Over Exposure
2 Stops Under Exposed
Late Night Snacks
High Iso
Late At Night
Family Panning
Panning
Taken Using Flash
Thanks for your comments everyone. I think what it taught me (and I'm still learning after 20+ years as a pro) was to use the cameras limitations to your advantage, so I used the high grain and the long exposure to add to the images instead of taking something away. If your given lemons, make lemonade kind of thing. the post has been picked up by a Thai news website too -https://petmaya.com/five-pounds-camera-photography-thailand?fbclid=IwAR1xCGdXg8-6nIFSa8QgLcywGBSjQ5w8vgg2Sd6wFJnDSJEyN19nwxjzLbY
This Shows Its Not The Camera, But What The Photographer Decides To Do In A situation Like That. Amazing.
I love the photos but they did have a certain holiday snap feel to them. I think the camera quality is more for the definition which makes them look more professional. Nice photos though.
Proves you don't need a fancy expensive camera to take wonderful photos
I like how you showed all the different aspects of the camera (under, over, long, high iso etc). Not gonna lie though, I rolled my eyes at the "to prove photography really isn't all about expensive equipment" because as I'm sure you know, it's about as novel a concept as shooting a suspension bridge in black and white. Literally every week for years I've seen articles about that.
Beautiful work. Remarkable photos. Like what... Of course, the equipment is important. But without the photographer's eye, it's worthless.
most of these look like random snapshots to me and lacking the thought and planning mentioned in the background story.... queue the downvoters!
Thanks for your comments everyone. I think what it taught me (and I'm still learning after 20+ years as a pro) was to use the cameras limitations to your advantage, so I used the high grain and the long exposure to add to the images instead of taking something away. If your given lemons, make lemonade kind of thing. the post has been picked up by a Thai news website too -https://petmaya.com/five-pounds-camera-photography-thailand?fbclid=IwAR1xCGdXg8-6nIFSa8QgLcywGBSjQ5w8vgg2Sd6wFJnDSJEyN19nwxjzLbY
This Shows Its Not The Camera, But What The Photographer Decides To Do In A situation Like That. Amazing.
I love the photos but they did have a certain holiday snap feel to them. I think the camera quality is more for the definition which makes them look more professional. Nice photos though.
Proves you don't need a fancy expensive camera to take wonderful photos
I like how you showed all the different aspects of the camera (under, over, long, high iso etc). Not gonna lie though, I rolled my eyes at the "to prove photography really isn't all about expensive equipment" because as I'm sure you know, it's about as novel a concept as shooting a suspension bridge in black and white. Literally every week for years I've seen articles about that.
Beautiful work. Remarkable photos. Like what... Of course, the equipment is important. But without the photographer's eye, it's worthless.
most of these look like random snapshots to me and lacking the thought and planning mentioned in the background story.... queue the downvoters!