View Full Version : How many of you have taken a photography course?
ralff
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 16:46
I was luck to attend a class at the locoal junior college where Richard Bernabe (Google his name) was the instructor. For 50 bucks I got six three hour classes AND a Sunday field trip, best money I have ever spent on anything. I am also lucky in that I live just off of the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina, and within 100 miles of some of the most beautful sscenery in the country., from the mountains to the seacoast.
justaf IREMAN
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 16:59
I took a course in college and dropped the class after a few weeks. I learned more shooting a bunch of images than sitting in class. I was also fortunate enough to work in a lab and had access to unlimited film and processing. Now, with pixels being free and you can erase and reshoot as many times as you want, I'm sure learning through experience is even easier. Taking classes though is definitely valuable, but was not for me at the time.
jacuff
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 17:13
I don't remember everybody I've met, but I'm about 95% certain I've run into Richard more than a few times while I've been out shooting. A few times he was doing a workshop on the Foothills Parkway and in the GRSM. He seemed like a nice guy that knew his stuff. $50 for 18 hours of instruction and a field trip sounds like a great deal.
Perry Ge
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 17:13
Yup, I've taken classes on darkroom techniques and studio lighting.
rdenney
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 17:57
I've taken classes, but none in actual photography. I have taken classes in
- art
- architecture
- drafting
- architectural rendering
- physics
I have followed good photographers around. But I learned what I needed to know in terms of photographic technology by reading books and by doing it. I had access to a studio and good darkrooms in college and took every advantage of it. I had access to large-format camera equipment and didn't miss that opportunity either. By the time I was an upperclassman, I was teaching classes in beginning photography and darkroom techniques. That was 31 years ago. I know at least 10 times as much now as then, again from practice.
Lots of dues-paying back in the day.
That said, I would even now love to take one of the Friends of Photography courses in Yosemite, or some such. Bond, Ross, Sexton, etc.--lots of truly amazing photographers who take the time to teach. I've just never been able to make it work out.
Rick "thinking one really learns when faced with teaching responsibilities" Denney
chauncey
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 19:40
Any idiot can learn the basics of photography, I'm one of them.
But learning to "see" that picture is something else entirely.
If it doesn't come naturally, go to college.
Wilt
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 22:28
Certainly it is easy enough to learn photography without having taken any courses. In college I was teaching assistant in photography, without ever having taken any official classes on the topic. But I did have professional coaching to learn how to do color processing, back while I was still in high school!
And I did take some courses well after college, and LEARNED a veriety of things from them, in spite of having a strong background already. So anyone who looks down their noses at courses is simply short sighted.
Photography is both a Vision and a Craft. The vision is inborn, the craft is learned.
alduin
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 22:38
I've never taken a formal course, but I've done a few seminars and have lately been fortunate enough to find something of a mentor in a local sports shooter.
I'd kind of like to take a course or two in the more artistic sides of photography, as I think that's where I need the most work, but there's just too much on the wish/to-do lists ahead of that at this point.
Oteck
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 22:40
this place is my class room much like the other forums i frequent (car clubs)
birdfromboat
16th of February 2009 (Mon), 23:53
I am currently in a community college class, I got a big discount on cs4, I have free access to bigger printers than I will ever own, and I get questions answered by a person that not only knows the answer but why I asked it and what I will need to know next. can't get that from the internet. well worth the time and money.
Big O
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 01:01
1 year in highschool, 1 year of university training, and currently about 40 percent of my life gaining experience.
FlyingPhotog
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 01:05
Many, many moons ago I took a basic B&W shoot, dunk, print course in high school.
The rest has been through reading, admiring the work of others, POTN and the Desert Light Photography Group which I was invited to join in November of 2007.
http://www.pbase.com/photobart/desert_light_themes
MickNY60
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 01:12
Several classes in high school, followed by a 2 year degree in photographic arts through a comm. college. Alas, that was long before anyone knew what a pixel was.
ralff
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 05:39
I don't remember everybody I've met, but I'm about 95% certain I've run into Richard more than a few times while I've been out shooting. A few times he was doing a workshop on the Foothills Parkway and in the GRSM. He seemed like a nice guy that knew his stuff. $50 for 18 hours of instruction and a field trip sounds like a great deal.
It is highly likely that you met him, he spends a lot of time teaching when he is not working, lucky guy to be working at what he loves. Great teacher too, does a lot of seminars and field trips (see his web site for some beautiful work!). I haven't gotten to see one yet but he did the entire Canon calendar this year, ask your Canon dealer to see theirs as they are not for sale to the public. He loves the outdoors and that is how he stumbled onto his career as a photographer, just trying to show other people the sites he was seeing on his trips.
nphsbuckeye
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 15:46
I took a basic digital class and learned next to nothing. However, next quarter I'm slated to save a digital manipulation class and BW darkroom.
[CaliGirl]
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 17:17
I am currently enrolled in a course at my local CC. I am very excited to soak up some knowledge. It's a 16-week digital photography course with several field trips and access to the school's digital darkroom equipped with CS4 and pro photo printers...
LowriderS10
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 17:48
I took one in high school (gr. 11), didn't learn much about photography but I did learn to make my own prints and hung out in the dark room with hot chicks, so life was good. In Gr. 12 the photo teacher asked me to be a teacher's assistant, and I figured an easy A and hanging out in the dark room with hot chicks was gonna be worth it, so I did it.
Then in uni, we were required to take a photo course (I have a journalism degree), which was taught by an utter moron, and I learned absolutely nothing and ended up teaching all my friends.
Bluewolf
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 21:16
I'm in an Intro to Digital Photography course at Ball State right now. I'm a Tcom major and it's one of the electives that I was able to take.
FlyingPhotog
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 21:57
I'm in an Intro to Digital Photography course at Ball State right now. I'm a Tcom major and it's one of the electives that I was able to take.
The MAC Rules...
(Central Michigan '84)
LowriderS10
17th of February 2009 (Tue), 22:39
The MAC Rules...
(Central Michigan '84)
good god you're old... ;)
FlyingPhotog
18th of February 2009 (Wed), 00:28
good god you're old... ;)
The older I get, the less inclined I become to grow up... :p :lol:
syee99
18th of February 2009 (Wed), 15:36
I'm a noobie hack that has never taken a photography course. I'm learning from the school of trial and error.
I REALLY want to take a class on it to help with my technique...just gotta find the time.
LowriderS10
18th of February 2009 (Wed), 21:21
The older I get, the less inclined I become to grow up... :p :lol:
amen! I'm 27 and my 10 yr high school reunion is this summer...and I feel like I was a helluva lot more grown up back then...I seem to be having a lot more fun now too :D
FlyingPhotog
18th of February 2009 (Wed), 22:01
amen! I'm 27 and my 10 yr high school reunion is this summer...and I feel like I was a helluva lot more grown up back then...I seem to be having a lot more fun now too :D
Oy... :rolleyes:
It's been 25 yrs since I left college ferchrisakes... :p
Bullfrog142
19th of February 2009 (Thu), 02:01
My preferred learning style is very much book-oriented so I read, read, read in order to study. I am, however, looking around for a good evening /weekend course in photography that I can fit in around work/family etc.
So, if anyone knows any good courses in the region of Den Haag, The Netherlands....
Harm
19th of February 2009 (Thu), 14:16
never done any courses..
ruchad1
20th of February 2009 (Fri), 05:25
Photo Major here so i kind of take a Photo course every semester.
Andrushka
20th of February 2009 (Fri), 05:57
I first began to learn the deeper things of photography from a used $3 Complete Idiots Guide to Photography like the Pros... $3 well spent ;) then it was all POTN for the last year and half - learning new stuff all the time :-)
LW Dail
20th of February 2009 (Fri), 06:59
B&W/Darkroom training in High School (not saying how long ago that was!)
Journalism major in college so a lot of photojournalism classes.
25 years of P&S fun while working my butt off.
Got the Rebel 4 years ago, read a lot of books, shot a lot of pics.
Got the 5D last April and am reading more books and shooting more pics.
If we ever get moved, I do want to do more 'formal' learning via classes and seminars. Currently we're 40 miles from a college - and most classes go until 9 pm. (I'm so old, I don't like driving at night!!!)
klbowden
20th of February 2009 (Fri), 12:20
I took a class in college on darkroom developing, etc....now I shoot digital so that is all forgotten....
Over the summer Itook a class at a local camera club. Awesome class...for 5 weeks on a saturday (10am-3/4pm - including a wonderful lunch) we were taught all they could cram at us (proper metering/exposure, night shots, flashes, studio lighting, posing, etc). They organized 2 field trips as well and all this for $160.00! Anyone in the Cleveland area? this is highly recommended...I'm now a member and they have wonderful contests and speaker and field trips.....www.clevelandphoto.org
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