Viggo Mortenson in Los Angeles, 2002 (Mamiya RZ67).<\/span> (Jake Chessum)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nThe 42-year-old portrait photographer has shot everyone from Stephen Colbert to Coldplay to Ben Harper.<\/p>\n
Buy the postcard.\u00a0<\/strong>Just enjoy a nice sunset rather than trying to photograph it. It'll never be as good as you'd hoped.<\/p>\nBe yourself.\u00a0<\/strong>Trying to take pictures in the style of your favorite photographer is a dead end. If you don't measure up, you'll feel like a failure, and if you do, you'll only be second-best.<\/p>\nHide those chins.\u00a0<\/strong>When photographing somebody with a double chin, keep the lens above the subject's eyes and say, “Chin down a bit.” The rolls will magically vanish.<\/p>\n \nJason Florio<\/h2>\n \u00a0<\/p>\n
The 44-year-old Manhattan-based photographer famously shot Afghanistan the month before the 9\/11 attacks.<\/p>\n
Ready, aim, fire.\u00a0<\/strong>You don't have to look through the viewfinder. Instead, try looking people in the eye, smile, and continue to shoot frames with your camera held surreptitiously at waist level. Your apparent cease-fire and eye contact will help put your subject at ease\u2014at least until he hears your camera firing. Lowering your camera also changes the perspective of the photo.<\/p>\n \nRobert Maxwell<\/h2>\nClimber Tori Allen in the Columbia River Gorge, Oregon, 2002 (Zone 6 4x5).<\/span> (Robert Maxwell)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nThe San Clemente\u2013based surfer and celebrity shooter, 47, is almost as colorful as his photographs.<\/p>\n
Act insane…<\/strong>\u00a0When I see body language I like, I'll scream, “Don't fucking move!” I find that if I ask politely, they'll move. Screaming helps get the job done.<\/p>\n… But be good.\u00a0<\/strong>Take beautiful photos and your audience will find you.<\/p>\n \nJimmy Chin<\/h2>\n \u00a0<\/p>\n
Chin, 35, a veteran of more than 20 Himalayan expeditions, is the go-to guy for any photo editor who needs work done above 8,000 meters.<\/p>\n
Make a checklist.\u00a0<\/strong>Anytime you're going on a shoot that's physically demanding, write a list of the photos you need. Then prioritize. There will be plenty going on during the day, and it can be easy to miss things like portraits or details.<\/p>\nKeep your cards close.\u00a0<\/strong>Memory cards are cheap now. On expeditions, I bring 60 to 100 gigabytes' worth. At the end of the day, download your cards onto a portable hard drive, but never erase them. Save your cards in Ziploc baggies like you would exposed film. CompactFlash memory cards\u2014which, unlike microdrives, contain no moving parts\u2014are safest.<\/p>\n \nJoel Lipovetsky<\/h2>\n \u00a0<\/p>\n
The Santa Fe\u2013based consultant, 34, teaches pros the tricks of the digital darkroom.<\/p>\n
Buy this program.\u00a0<\/strong>Adobe's Lightroom is like iTunes for your photos. It's fast, and it allows you to create galleries, organize multiple albums, and make basic corrections. For more advanced post-production work, you'll need Photoshop.<\/p>\nYou'll need Photoshop.\u00a0<\/strong>Digital cameras capture images in a totally different way from film cameras\u2014namely, worse. They reproduce midtones and sharpness poorly. Photoshop makes up for the deficiency the same way Fuji Velvia and Kodachrome film amped colors back when people shot slides.<\/p>\nHit the books.\u00a0<\/strong>You've got to invest time in learning Photoshop. Martin Evening's Adobe Photoshop CS4 for Photographers<\/em> is a good place to start. I give my clients four or five macros that mathematically fix common problems like midtone contrast.<\/p>\nCalibrate your screen.\u00a0<\/strong>All computer monitors reproduce colors differently. If you want to print your pictures, you've got to have your screen adjusted with a light-reading tool called a spectrophotometer. Call your local specialty photo printer to see if they've got one. A calibration should cost $40.<\/p>\nThen print at Costco.\u00a0<\/strong>Amazingly, most digital-photo kiosks can produce high-quality prints if you give them the right information. Get your photos looking like you want them in Photoshop, then print with the machine's auto-correct feature turned off.<\/p>\n\u00a0<\/p>\n
\nChris Anderson<\/h2>\n \u00a0<\/p>\n
Anderson, a 39-year-old, New York\u2013based photographer, covers war, fashion, and everything else.<\/p>\n
Stay loose.\u00a0<\/strong>Antonin Kratochvil gave me this, and somehow it makes sense when he says it. If you try too hard, if you're too uptight, the photos never seem to work. You've got to be like an athlete and react to what happens. That's how you capture those moments of serendipity. It's especially important in other countries. Maybe you've got culture shock, food poisoning, or something else. You've got to tolerate the differences and flow with things that you didn't plan or expect. If you stay loose, it's going to work out.<\/p>\n \nAlex Tehrani<\/h2>\n \u00a0<\/p>\n
The 38-year-old New York\u2013based world citizen is our man for assignments in his home country of Iran.<\/p>\n
Pack light. Pack smart.\u00a0<\/strong>You don't need to be geared out with tons of lenses and bodies. Carting all that stuff around is a burden and only serves to confuse the task at hand. Choose one camera body and two lenses at most.<\/p>\nWhat you see is never what you get.\u00a0<\/strong>The shot you think you're taking is never the one you end up with. Acknowledge that now and instead get excited about the surprise. It could be better than you'd hoped.<\/p>\nAnyone can shoot chaos.\u00a0<\/strong>But the most perceptive photographers can make compelling pictures out of uninteresting moments.<\/p>\nBe patient.\u00a0<\/strong>Try letting the picture come to you. Sometimes it works better that way.<\/p>\n \nMyth Busting<\/h2>\n \u00a0<\/p>\n
Some of the things you hear over and over about taking great photos aren't necessarily true.<\/p>\n
Shoot during “the golden hour” for the best results.<\/strong> The last hour of sunlight doesn't make people look fabulous; it makes them look orange. If you're going to shoot during the so-called golden hour, try shooting into the sun\u2014and adjusting your light meter so you're not shooting silhouettes\u2014to give everything a back-lit glow. \u2014EDS<\/p>\nYou need permission.<\/strong> U.S. law gives photographers wide latitude to document anyone\u2014kids, police officers, criminals\u2014in public places, so long as those places don't give the people in them a reasonable expectation of privacy, as in a ladies' room. On private property, you can be toldto stop shooting or to leave, but, no, nobody can confiscate your camera, film, or memory cards without a court order. Learn more in Bert Krages's Legal Handbook for Photographers.<\/em>\u00a0\u2014Jason Florio<\/p>\nYou need a ton of megapixels.<\/strong> Most amateurs obsess over image quality. Eight-megapixel images are generally sufficient for printed spreads in this magazine. If you just bought a camera, chances are you have more than ten. Most pictures, though, end up on the Web, and the ones that are printed are rarely enlarged beyond four-by-six. Worry more about the image you're framing and less about your pixel count. And when you buy a camera, think about shutter lag, aperture control, and exposure compensation. Those things do matter. \u2014Jake Chessum<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Indispensable lessons in adventure photography\u2014 and a few new books\u2014from the experts. Get inspired, and then get out there.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1727316,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"uuid":"c5437978299b31c3fae064ead883a323","footnotes":""},"categories":[2575],"tags":[2598,2642,2638],"byline":[105],"ad_cat":[],"legacy-category":[],"class_list":["post-2439936","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-books-media","tag-celebrities","tag-media","tag-photography","byline-editors"],"acf":[],"parsely":{"version":"1.1.0","meta":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@type":"NewsArticle","headline":"See It Their Way: Lessons in ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Photography","url":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/culture\/books-media\/see-it-their-way-lessons-adventure-photography\/","mainEntityOfPage":{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/culture\/books-media\/see-it-their-way-lessons-adventure-photography\/"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/cdn.outsideonline.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/migrated-images_parent\/migrated-images_90\/bird-adventure_h.jpg","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/cdn.outsideonline.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/migrated-images_parent\/migrated-images_90\/bird-adventure_h.jpg"},"articleSection":"Books & Media","author":[{"@type":"Person","name":"sperkins-pom"}],"creator":["sperkins-pom"],"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Online","logo":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/07\/favicon-194x194-1.png"},"keywords":["celebrities","media","photography"],"dateCreated":"2009-09-01T00:00:00Z","datePublished":"2009-09-01T00:00:00Z","dateModified":"2021-06-29T19:23:12Z"},"rendered":"