BALI TOUR PHOTOGRAPHY: photography tips

Landscape Bali Tour Photography

Bali Tour Photography specializes in arranging tours according to your prefference. Whether you are a professional photographer, a hobbist, or just interested in photography, let us guide you in our tours of Java, Bali, Lombok, and Flores.

Rinjani Trekking Tour 2N/3D

It is suggested that the Rinjani suite is of mantle origin, but that all the andesite and dacites as well as many of the basalts have probably been modified by fractional crystallization processes.

Bromo Landscape Photography

Bromo Tengger Semeru National Park is located in East Java, Indonesia, to the east of Malang and to the southeast of Surabaya, the capital of East Java.

Animal Photography

Animal photographers often attempt to document the space as well as convey an appreciation of the scenery.

Bali Tour Photography Transport

To support the program Bromo Bali Tour Photography, to explore every corner in Bromo, we use the Jeep.

Welcome to Nathan Tour and Travel.

Whether you are a professional photographer, a hobbist, or just interested in photography, let us guide you in our tours of Java, Bali, Lombok, and Flores.

Let me make your holiday in Java, Bali, Lombok, Flores become unforgettable, Our service is to provide English speaking driver / guide who will be your capable mediator to the islands. If you have questions about Java, Bali, Lombok , and Flores before you fly here, do not hesitate to contact us, Nathan Tour and Travel, we will set some drivers / guides who speak English well that will take you for a holiday in Bali.
Showing posts with label photography tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography tips. Show all posts

Photography Tips


Each place we visit has its own particular look, character, and ambiance. If we want photographs of our travels to be good and lasting, they should capture all of these qualities, and say as much about a place as give the literal look of it.
We are unlikely to long remember the smell and buzz of a flower garden in spring, the awe of gazing for the first time at the mountain we intend to climb, the caress of a tropical breeze, the thrill of a huge roller coaster, the wonder of our first wild bear, or the adrenaline of rafting white water. Our photographs need to bring these and other sensations back, to trigger our memories, and to communicate how we felt to others. To do this, we need to think and feel as much as look when setting out to make photographs.

First and foremost, think about what made you decide, out of all the places in the world, to choose this particular destination. Whatever it is—the beach, the rides, the mountain, the galleries, the food—obviously appeals to you. If it didn't, you wouldn't be going there. That site or activity (or inactivity) is one of the things you want to photograph. But there are probably many other interesting aspects of the place you may not be aware of. That's where research comes in.

Photographers for National Geographic spend a lot of time doing research. This helps us figure out what's there—what the place is about and what subjects we need to cover. Read brochures and travel books. Go to libraries, bookstores, or onto the Web. Talk to friends who have been there. Pick up travel information at the country's embassy. Find whatever you can that is relevant, and devour it.
Understanding the customs and traditions of a place is vital. For one thing, you want to be sure you act in a way that is not rude or offensive while you are there, and it's hard to know what's acceptable and what isn't with some knowledge. It can also help you understand things people do that at first encounter you might consider incomprehensible or even horrifying.

When you arrive at your destination, be open and try to take note of the first impressions—write them down if you have to. (A notebook is an essential accessory for a travel photographer.) When you see a place for the first time from the plane window, or when you drive around a bend and there it is, or as the ship nears some distant island—how do you feel? Where do your eyes go first? What do you notice about the place right away? A smell? The heat or cold? Blistering sunlight? Mysterious fog? A particular building or vista? The way people move? Their dress? Whatever it is, remember it. First impressions are invaluable sparks to creative interpretation, and by definition are not repeatable. You've seen the place in pictures, you've read about it. Now you're there, and all your senses can partake.