Take Your Best Shot
Tim Grey Tackles Your Digital Darkroom Questions
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Released: July 2008
Pages: 256
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oreilly Take Your Best Shot
 
4.5

(based on 2 reviews)

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5.0

Excellent Resource for New Digital Phot

By Jeremy Hall

from Pleasant Grove, UT

About Me Designer, Photographer

Pros

  • Accurate
  • Concise
  • Easy to understand
  • Well-written

Cons

    Best Uses

    • Novice
    • Student

    Comments about oreilly Take Your Best Shot:

    Tim Grey provides a perfect, approachable style throughout his coverage of the most popular questions people have when getting started in photography. When I say getting started, I mean the photographer that has realized they want to do something more than take just the every day snapshot and wants to educate themselves. This is the kind of information you can find around the 'net, but this book does a great job pulling together the most important ideas.

    The Q&A format works perfectly for these topics, allowing the reader to quickly browse to areas that most interest them. You can read it cover to cover or easily jump to a specific question that applies to you. Grey's writing style is approachable, making every topic understandable to even the most lay reader.

    This is one of those books I keep around as a great loaner to those frequent friends that are new to photography and turn to me for answers. I can save a lot of time letting them review this book!

     
    4.0

    A digital photographer's reference with a different approach

    By Pam Doughty

    from Undisclosed

    Comments about oreilly Take Your Best Shot:

    Reviewed by Steve Cooper from AUSOM Inc www.ausom.net.au

    A digital photographer's reference with a different approach

    Author Tim Grey started the Digital Darkroom Questions email newsletter in 2001, and since then has provided the answers to thousands of questions posed by digital photographers. Take Your Best Shot is a product of this experience.

    This is not a book for beginning photographers; rather, it's intended for those who have a good grasp of the essentials of digital photography and image manipulation, but who have problems or questions not addressed by the typical manual or Help system.

    Each of its ten chapters addresses a dozen or more questions chosen to cover a broad range of topics. In keeping with the book's general approach the answers are not what you'd call finely detailed, but will very well suit the reader with a basic understanding of the issues at hand.

    Answers are typically accompanied by high-quality colour photographs, diagrams and/or screenshots. The book design is easy on the eye and a good table of contents and index make it easy to find questions relevant to a topic that interests you. The author's tone is conversational but matter-of-fact.

    The book begins with chapters on digital fundamentals, cameras and other tools, image capture and the digital darkroom setup. Next it addresses colour management, optimizing in Photoshop CS3, and creative effects. Finally there are chapters covering image problem solving techniques, printing and digital sharing.

    Given that there are surely as many questions about digital photography as there are photographs, no book of this type can claim to be a complete reference, but Take Your Best Shot does a good job of covering a large number of topics of general interest in a way that moves a little beyond the typical 'beginner's how-to'.

    Take Your Best Shot; author Tim Grey; published July 2008, O'Reilly; ISBN 9780596518257; 228 pages; US$34.99.

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