The ideal companion guide for capturing awe-inspiring photos of Yosemite! Whether using a compact camera or a high-end dSLR; this companion guide provides you with detailed information for taking spectacular shots of some of the most recognizable landmarks in the world. Whether you aim to capture memorable photos of Half Dome; El Capitan; Vernal Fall; Mariposa Grove; or one of Yosemites other many remarkable attractions; this portable resource goes where you go and walks you through valuable tips and techniques for taking the best shot possible. Youll discover suggested locations for taking photos; recommended equipment; what camera settings to use; best times of day to photograph specific attractions; how to handle weather challenges; and more. In addition; beautiful images of Yosemites most breathtaking attractions and recognizable landmarks serve to both inspire and assist you as you embark on an amazing photographic adventure! Elevates your photography skills to a new level with photography secrets from professional photographer Lewis Kemper Presents clear; understandable tips and techniques that span all skill levels; using all types of digital cameras; from compact cameras to high end DSLRs Features Yosemites main attractions in alphabetical order as well as thumb tabs on the pages so you can quickly and easily access the information you are looking for Shares detailed information and insight on critical topics; such as ideal locations to photograph from; the best time of day to shoot; camera equipment to have handy; weather conditions; and optimal camera settings to consider Whether youre a local familiar with the territory or a visitor seeing this beautiful U.S. National Park for the first time; this handy guide will help capture fantastic photos!
#2777325 in eBooks 1999-02-25 1999-02-25File Name: B003AU4DJQ
Review
23 of 35 people found the following review helpful. Sh*t Sandwich: a good comic effortBy A CustomerAfter "The Rants" and "Ranting Again". Miller really delivers here. If you liked his work on Saturday Night Live. you will really enjoy this work. which shouldve been titled "Late Night Modernism." I didnt know whether to laugh or take out a note pad. Millers parody of academic idiom reproduces the real thing so closely that it might fool a tenured mind. His comparision of Beckett with Giacommetti was a hoot. but bringing in Bim and Bom went too far- that is my only gripe. Fans of Miller might have expected in this context a kind of "Surrealist Weekend Update." But the knotted and loopy references of his stand up routine have been translated well into pseudo-academic style. including footnotes. His pidgin academic is a veritable laugh griot.20 of 29 people found the following review helpful. a better book than first meets the eyeBy Hugh GiadicciI was first drawn to this book while waiting for my paramour outside of a popular but nameless Manhattan bookstore. She was late. as always. and to kill the time I skimmed the remainder bins. where some untutored storeclerk had remorselessly dumped several copies of Millers "Late Modernism." Was it the light winter breeze against my exposed neck. or Millers icy analytical touch. as he claws his way through the work of Barnes. Joyce. and Brothers that produced that uncanny frisson of feeling I felt as I turned from page to page? Who can say. Clearly Miller has fulfilled the wish of Eliots Prufrock. and we as readers feel compelled. altogether willingly. to scuttle silently across the pages of "Late Modernism." Reviewers on the books jacket had promised readers a "crabbed journey through the unnoticed grottoes of late modernism. and at the same time. a forward walking approach to literary theory." Miller delivers. As Miller suggests. form and content can be conceived against the legendary late modernist binary of the shell and the inside. and with Millers unrelenting hermenuetic in hand. we as readers become the recipients of the most succulent morsels of this most crustaceous period in Western literature. Miller casts his nets wide. revealing the fallacy of the classic distinction between the figurative and the littoral. which in recent criticism of this period has become something of a red herring. In the end. we recognize as readers what Miller has apparently known all along: that the crabs of modernism outnumber those of any cheap hotel.18 of 40 people found the following review helpful. trouble to digest this bookBy Herbie SimplexThis book. very puzzling. I read last night on way back from very excellent smorgasborg dinner at friend house. He make extra fine meatloaf with bread and also butter. I never so full. In all my life. I say. and very happy too. So then what? I read book. So depressing. you see. Mr. Tyrus Miller. he crack open modernism like rotten coconut and pour out spoiled milk for all to see. Now I am so sick and in pain. surely I die soon.