| OCR Text |
Show Dont let camera o by Gary Haynes J great dangers todays fine cameras is hat lazy photographers are died into traps. Some of the cameras do iractically everything but hink, and some photo-rapher- s using cameras ant seem to add that mis-in- g ingredient. EXAMPLE: I recently iked a photographer why wo rolls of his negatives, hot in broad daylight, eemed at least three stops speed-apertur- depth-of-fiel- pre-judg- e EXAMPLE: You want to photograph a performer on a stage under spotlights. If you could be on stage and meter the light on the performer, you would get a reading showing that you have plenty of illumination to deal with. A common film exposure with ASA-40- 0 of someone spotlighted on a stage is a 250th or 125th at If you meter such a situation from a spectator seat in a darkened auhigh-intensi- Overexposed. He told me, as that explained it, that he didn't notice the meter leeded a new battery. I Great grubby grief! A Built-imetering system is rrific, but it cant substi-Jit- e for a photographer who Always knows what shutter leed and aperture hes Hsing When a meter battery ftils, a not uncommon happening, the photographer sing his head isnt going to O'1 trapped into blazing way from that point on at tie wrong peed combination. ARE certain s fesic exposures all should learn to use rith the film he or she most pmmonly uses. They are ITHERE photo-japher- enough. arrive at correct exposure by control pi those how you inability to think graphers an about a scene to exposure before getting led down the wrong path by a spurious meter reading. ditorium, however, the meter is going to indicate a need for greater exposure, and your temptation will be to open up to accommodate. If you do succumb and open up, and its the act on stage youre trying to photograph, lots of luck, because the image of the performers will be so overexposed that good prints will be impossible. The meter wont think for you. It will average in those large dark areas surrounding the spotlighted central subject, and indicate that a greater exposure is needed or that no picture is possible CjgJ 5- snapshots THE SALT Lake Tribunes Summertime Snapshot contest concluded with the tenth weeks winners being announced in the Aug. 6 issue of Home Magazine. However, there are more snapshots to come. The eight winners of all the winners will be announced in next weeks magazine. Of the hundreds of photographs entered in the contest these eight winners are chosen as the best of all the weekly winners. IF YOU have been following the contest, check next week for a look at the best of the best. i SI - FREE ESTIMATES CALL ANYTIME Ph. 943-231- 7 FRANK YOUNG CO. E. 2198 7075 South --v i Four Great Holiday Cruises On two Outstanding Ships! CHRISTMAS 1978NEW YEARS 1979 mts DAPHNE mts DANAE Elegantly designed with staterooms comparatively more spacious than on other ships, each with private facilities, including bathtub. Atten tive crew, Continental cuisine and special entertainment highlight these exclusive holiday airsea PANAMA CANAL CHRISTMAS 20-310 Days from $998 Dec. Sail through the Panama Canal aboard Daphne in daylight on Chnstmas Eve. Our airsea from Curacao to Ac lpulcc also cruise Dec. 20-3visits Cartagena, Panama City and Acajutla. Price includes air transportation betw en Daphne and Los AngeiesSan Francisco! MEXICAN RIVIERA NEW YEAR Dec. 30 Jan. 6 7 Days from $698 Toast 1979 aboard Daphne sailing from Acapulco to Los Angeles. Ports include Manzanillo, Puerto Vallarta, Mazatlan with a cruise by magnificent Cabo San Lucas. Price includes air transportation from Los AngelesSan Francisco to join the ship at Acapulco. LOS ANGELES TO ACAPULCO Jan. 6-1- The reverse of our popular Mexican Riviera New Years sailing! Seven days airsea cruise from $698. Visits the same ports, and you fly home at our expense from Acapulco. SPECIALLY PRICED PANAMA CANAL CRUISE Jan. 13-2from $1398 Acapulco to Montego Bay 7 S u mmer t i me S' Siding at all in that light. The photographers brain takes over. With an adjustable camera, its a rare scene that you can see but that you cannot photograph, provided you can open your lens enough or slow the shutter and hold the camera steady The photographer should always monitor the exposure e for shutter combinations that best serve the photographic need to stop action and control To not know Coupled with this difficulty is a related problem afflicting some of todays photo- . . Garages Kitchens printed on the sheet packed with every roll of film. variables is to miss much of what good photo- graphy is all about. But the built-i- n meters do lull one into complacency. . Room Additions Writer two Kinds Oj Sr oV REMODELING All ONE OF the ' O fool you Knight-Ridde- r ,0', The Panama Canal cruise with everyThing, including South America and the Caribbean! Sail Daphne from Acapulco to Montego Bay with stops at Acajutla, Panama City, transit the famous Canal, Cartagena (buy your emeralds here), La Guaira, Curacao, Santo Domingo and exotic An incomparable cruise at an unbeatable price! We invite you to compare. Prices also include air transportation between Los AngelesSan Francisco and Acapulco, and return home from Montego Bay. CHRISTMAS LANDS OE THE MA YA Dec. 20- - 30 10 Days from $1098 Danae offers the only complete "lands of the Ancient Maya cruise this winter, and its at Christmas! Spend Dec. 25th visiting the Copan from ruins in Honduras. Danae sails Dec. New Orleans for Montego Bay, Puerto Cortes. Santo Tomas and Playa del CarmenCozumel. Price includes roundtrip air transportation be tween major cities and New Orleans, the Jazziest city of them all. 20-3- HAVANA NEW YEAR'S CRUISE Dec. 30 Jan. 6 7 Days from $798 Spend New Year's Eve at a Gala party at sea as Danae cruises from New Orleans to Cozumel, Havana and the pristine white beaches at Grand Cayman. Sail Dec. 30, return Jan. 6. Prices include roundtrip air transportation between major cities and New Orleans. mts DAPHNE and mts DANAE registered in Greece plus holiday sitpph The Salt I,ake limits and! or port taxis, as applicable Caras cruises See the Cruise Specialist Your Knowledgeable Travel Agent August 13, 1978 II 3I |