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The Camera Phone Book: Comments on the Advice from This Book

Camera phone photo taken by Todd OgasawaraThe USA Weekend insert in my local paper has an interesting full page article title How to make the most of your camera phone that gets its information from the new book The Camera Phone Book: How to Shoot Like a Pro, Print, Store, Display, Send Images, Make a Short Film by CNet’s Aimee Baldridge and and National Geographic photographer Robert Clark. I haven’t read this book. But, based on the co-authors’ credentials, I’ll guess it is a pretty good book. I do have some issues and additional advice for the tips extracted from the book in the USA Weekend article though. I’ll go through the two lists of advice from the main article and its sidebar.

Main Article

So, for the first set of advice, I give them half a point out of the four pieces of advice.

Sidebar

I’ll give them a half point for each piece of advice in the sidebar. So, they get a total of 2 points out of a total of 7 pieces of advice.

The best camera phone advice, IMHO, is to take a lot of photos with it and learn its specific strengths and weaknesses. My T-Mobile SDA camera phone, for example, does not have a very good camera. Although it has options to adjust for some lighting conditions, it does not do a very good job of it. It tends to overexpose in bright sunlight and have a lot of noise in low light levels. However, it tends to take decent photos at dusk and dawn (i.e., when dramatic lighting is available). The example photo here was taken using the SDA.

I’m reasonably happy with the photos I get from my camera phone. But, I manage my expectations. I know they won’t be anywhere near as nice as photos taken even with low-end digital cameras. But, at least I have a photo of something that would have otherwise been missed. If I know I want to take better photos when wandering around, I carry a small digital camera with me. I still carry the Canon PowerShot SD200 I bought two years ago (see my review here: Canon PowerShot SD200: A Big Little Camera. It is just a 3 megapixel camera. But, it takes better photos than any camera phone I’ve ever used and fits in my shirt pocket (I use a neck strap to make sure I don’t lose it).

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