JOIN IN THE FUN!
One of the great things about photography is being able to share your view of the world. This month, one photographer reunites subjects from more than 40 years ago! Another breaks the mold and photographs elusive birds.
We want your photos and stories! For your chance to show off your images in PhotoPlus, email three to five high-resolution JPEGS, along with a brief synopsis - explain why you took the shots, the location, whether they're part of an ongoing project or a one-off shoot, and anything else unusual or interesting. Also include Canon EOS camera, lens and exposure details.
Email images and info to photoplus@futurenet.com
Catch us online at www.facebook.com/ photoplusmag www.instagram.com/ PhotoPlusCanonMag www.twitter.com/ photoplusmag
PROJECT INFO⠀⠀
NAME: Chris Porsz
LOCATION: Peterborough, UK
MISSION: Reunite and photograph people he shot back in the late '70s and early '80s
KIT: Canon EOS 5D Mark III and Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L II USM lens
www.chrisporsz.com
In the late '70s I had a Kodak Instamatic camera and I fell in love with street photography whilst hitchhiking around Europe. I'm self taught and even set up my own darkroom, safe to say there were a lot of hard lessons to be learnt along the way and many rolls of film destroyed. I was more interested in people than the architecture of my street photos back then, I was also more shy and I'd tend to shoot with a long telephoto lens to take candid snaps without being spotted, I think both of these aspects have changed in my style over the years.
This story is from the Spring 2022 edition of PhotoPlus : The Canon Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Spring 2022 edition of PhotoPlus : The Canon Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The Art of Copying Art - James Paterson shows you how to use your Canon gear to capture artwork and paintings the right way with simple camera and lighting skills
Whether you want to capture a painting like the above, digitise old prints or reproduce any kind of canvas, there's real skill in capturing artwork with your camera. Not only do you need the colours to be accurate, you also need to master the spread, angle and quality of the light to minimise glare and show the work at its best.This painting by the artist Bryan Hanlon has a wonderfully subtle colour palette. To reproduce the painting in print and digital form, it needs to be captured in the right way.
Fright night
Canon photographer and digital artist Alexander loves to craft incredible fantasy scenes with a spooky horror twist
Sharpen your shots with DPP
Sharpening a digital image also increases contrast at the edge of details
CANON ImagePrograf PRO-1100
Deeper blacks, better bronzing, greater lifespan and 5G Wi-Fi -Canon's new printer is full of new tech, says
Canon's new 'kit lens' is actually a half-price f/2.8 trinity lens!
The Canon RF 28-70mm F2.8 IS STM lacks a red ring, but borrows premium features from its L-series siblings
DREW GIBSON
Pro motorsports photographer Drew on why he hasn't (yet) switched to Canon's mirrorless system, why old-school techniques can be the most reliable, and the lessons learned from more than a decade shooting the world's biggest car brands
Up in smoke
Make a smoky shape in Affinity Photo and get to grips with the amazing Liquify Persona under the guidance of James Paterson
Expand your creativity with Generative Fill
Photoshop's Al-powered feature brings revolutionary new tools to image editing. James Paterson reveals all...
Turn your images into vintage postcards
Wish you were here? Sean McCormack explains how you can give your summer photographs a vintage postcard look
The Angel Malibu
Light painting an American movie producer in the Wadi Rum Desert in Jordan was a highly unlikely evening out for David!