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The Confused Photographer's Guide to Photographic Exposure and the Simplified Zone System |  | Go Tell a Friend | |

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| Author: Bahman Farzad Creator: Linda Voychehovski Publisher: Confused Photographer's Guide Books. Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy Used: $19.94 as of 7/29/2010 19:08 CDT details You Save: $10.01 (33%)
New (4) Used (19) Collectible (1) from $19.94
Seller: fallenleafs Rating: 45 reviews Sales Rank: 335556
Media: Paperback Edition: 4th Pages: 292 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8 Dimensions (in): 11 x 8.5 x 0.7
ISBN: 0966081714 Dewey Decimal Number: 771 EAN: 9780966081718 ASIN: 0966081714
Publication Date: January 11, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Contrary to popular belief, when you buy an expensive camera the exposure skills DO NOT COME with it! When you buy an expensive GUITAR, you KNOW that playing skills DO NOT COME with it! When you buy an expensive CAR, you KNOW that driving skills DO NOT COME with it! When you buy an expensive CAMERA, why, then, do you NOT KNOW that exposure skills DO NOT COME with it? This book teaches the beginning Digital/35mm photographer (9th grade level) the simple and practical methods of correctly exposing a subject. This is also the world's first Digital Zone System book that addresses the application of the Zone System of exposure using current manual digital cameras including many of today's D-Slrs. The book covers in detail the applications of a camera's meter, an off-camera spot meter, an off-camera incident meter, and easy-to-remember techniques for exposing sunlit to moonlit subjects without a meter. The book uses Farzad's simplified 5-stop technique using 100 ISO color slide or Digital Film as its base, but the same techniques can be applied to Black and White, as well as color negative film with different ISOs. Since all the thinking is done before the photographer takes the picture, the book is ideal for this millennium's 35mm photographers that use one-hour processing labs. Since all the exposure decisions are made ahead of time (before the picture is taken), the technique saves the digital photographer many hours that he or she would waste behind the computer trying to figure out what he/she wanted to capture in the first place. The highest level of math required from the reader to understand this book, is to be able to multiply and divide a number by two. Also in the fourth edition (with the Lotus flower on the cover), a special calibration section is added to the end of the book for all those photographers who have spent a few thousand dollars on their D-Slr and are consistently getting underexposed and unacceptable images. The fourth edition also includes Digital footnotes and assignments for photographers using manual digital cameras. The book also includes Digital as well as 35mm exposure cheat sheets for Canon EOS 5D, Canon EOS 10D, Canon EOS 20D, Canon EOS 30D, Canon EOS A2/A2e, Canon EOS Rebel TI, Canon EOS Rebel XT, Canon EOS Rebel Xti, Canon PowerShot G5, FujiFilm FinePix S7000, Minolta Maxxum 5, Minolta Maxxum 7, Minolta Maxxum 9, Minolta Maxxum STSi, Nikon Coolpix 990, Nikon Coolpix 5700, Nikon Coolpix 8700, Nikon D50, Nikon D70, Nikon D80, Nikon D200, Nikon F4, Nikon F5, Nikon F100, Nikon N70, Nikon N90, Nikon N6006, Nikon N8008s, Pentax *ist-D, Pentax 645N, Pentax MZS, Pentax PZ1P, and Sony DSC-F717.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 45
Should be called the confusing guide. May 28, 2010 Andrew Bennett (Melbourne, Australia) This overlong and badly designed tome has a few snippets of useful information buried under a largely incoherent mass.
Terribly written, riddled with errors that any semi-capable proof reader would pick-up, and full of contradictory or inconsistent advice. Also, the author's insistence on clinging religiously to slide film as the basis for the text renders the book of marginal relevance in the digital age.
But don't take my word for it, here's what the author himself writes on p.52:
"If the last paragraph left you confused, that was intentional."
Perhaps I misunderstood the title, and confused is what you are meant to be AFTER you've read it, not before.
If so, then it succeeds brilliantly. If not, then it's a miserable failure.
words of a wise in a language of a simpleton December 7, 2009 Timbus (Bloomington, IN USA) I PERSONALLY found this book very useful. The author painstakingly tries his best to explain the zone system using 250 pages - something that is mentioned in other photography books with only one sentence: "find the correct exposure of your reference tone and everything else will naturally fall into its place"
The author is a wise person and the book is the fruit of his teaching experiences of many years. However, this could also be the fault of this book, that the author makes almost no assumption about the readers' knowledge level (or even intelligence level), and tries too hard to explain simple concepts using kindergartenish language and illustrations. Sometimes, over-explanation could result in the opposite effect and leave users more confused.
The computer-generated illustrations are also too simplistic for real situations - although the author argues otherwise.
Nontheless, I personally found this book very useful and informative, and answers questions that are left unmentioned in other books (such as what could you do if the dynamic range of the scene is much wider than what your film can take). If you know how to selectively read a book, this is a treasure. But I am sure many people will disagree.
So rather than buying this book, I would recommend you to borrow it from your local library first and see if it makes sense to you.
Great Book August 10, 2009 Sue T. White This book is filled with graphics and information anyone can grasp.Recomend it for all who don't know about lighting.
Quite good January 29, 2009 C Graff An easier way to understanding the zone-system than the classic "The Negative".
Presentation quite original, perhaps a little chaotic at times. This is not a coffetable book. More like a print-out black and white manual inside. You will find parts in this book in his other excellent book on spotmetering. Wished he had included some information on the Nikon entry level D-40 along with all the other tabulated quick guides.
I recommend this book along with his other on the spotmeter. They explain very well the relationships between iso, aparture, and shutterspeed and how to configure them in most photo-situations
Under expectations November 16, 2008 D. Pennington (Centre-West Brazil) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Bahman Farzad's simplified Zone system is a good down-to-the-point book. It really passes through the idea, and on that aspect is very good. It lacks, however, examples, I mean application examples - as Farzad 'sells' his book through the beautiful photos on his site. Another point is that the book is needing an update, although it is a 2007 edition. I also purchased the other book, 'On Camera Spot Metering', that dissapointed me, as it is mostly an exerpts-copy of the former book. I recomend the Simplified Zone System, but not the On Camera Spot Metering.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 45
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