This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Community Corner

Holiday Lights, Cameras, Action

Festive scenes, family gatherings make for great photos—if you know what you're doing. Follow these tips to capture each special moment.

Each season provides opportunities for anyone with a camera to take fantastic photos that become family heirlooms, hilarious reminders of wonderful gatherings and touching mementos of milestone moments. But celebrating the winter holidays provides a number of challenges—whether you're shooting inside in candlelight, by the fire, around the Christmas tree, or outside in bitter cold, wind, or snow.

For years, I have taught the principles of winter photography at my International Photographic Workshops of Grand Fenway. Dozens of students paid thousands of Zeligs to learn these techniques (How fondly I recall when a Zelig was worth more than a plug-nickel). But, to help you make the season bright, follow these tips and tricks to create lasting memories:

The Nature of Light as It Applies to Nature (And Your Lifestyle)

Find out what's happening in Encino-Tarzanawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Each season's natural light has its benefits and challenges. Short winter days don't mean it's impossible to get great shots outside. The sun lies low, casting longer shadows, but golden light fills the morning sky and creates magnificent silhouettes against bare trees, structures, windows, roads, or your children having breakfast near a kitchen window.

Same thing in the evening. Because the sun doesn't rise that high during the day, it casts a beautiful golden light accompanied by a dramatically deep blue sky. Shoot down your street, the avenue, on the train or bus ride from or to work. Look for silhouettes; they can be amazingly graphic — a glimmer of a warm highlight on a face, or a head lit from behind is dramatic and a beautiful alternative to the all-too-frequent "candid" shots of family members in their best forced smiles, standing straight as a post.

Find out what's happening in Encino-Tarzanawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Talking Technique

When shooting where there is a lot of snow in the background, set your camera dial in the "snow-scene" mode. Camera meters are designed to provide an overall "good" exposure by averaging the incoming light to create an evenly exposed image containing highlights and shadows. Shooting in bright, reflective snow-filled areas can result in an underexposed image, making things look a bit muddy. The "snow-scene mode" compensates for this by increasing the exposure to brighten things up as they are seen through your LCD or viewfinder.

SET YOUR WHITE BALANCE

It's easiest to keep your white balance settings on Auto Balance, but manually adjusting this important control  greatly improves the overall color of your photos if you are going between indoors—primarily lit with household lights—and outdoors frequently.

THE NEED FOR SPEED

If you are shooting a lot of fast-moving action—kids ripping open packages, people skating, skiing, sledding, falling, tubing—use a faster shutter speed to stop the action. This might mean increasing your ISO setting to gain a faster speed, but since digital cameras give you the chance to review and edit photos immediately, you can experiment and refine on the fly. Helpful hint: The batteries get colder as you're shooting outside, which can make the camera slower to focus and not able to handle rapid-fire action shots, so plan your shots ahead of where you think the main action is going to take place. And get close, too, for that final action image.

HANDLING THE HOLIDAYS

Nothing is as fun as watching kids rip open their gifts on Christmas morning. To catch all the action, prep ahead of time: have batteries charged overnight and get down and dirty with the rugrats. Shooting low, as from a child's view, helps you capture the excitement as the wrapping flies around the scene. Use your multiple-frame mode to be sure not to miss "the moment." Shoot "wide" and get close too.

When it comes time for the evening meal, the table is set, candles are lit, the fire is roaring... grab that camera and set your mode to "nighttime fill" or whatever mode your manual indicates that the flash will fire—lighting the foreground, but also letting the room's ambient light appear natural. Use your "red-eye" setting too.

But technical tips aside, follow these other tips for getting memorable shots:

Find some guinea pigs. Try out shots and techniques in spots around your house where people will gather. In the living room, the kitchen, the back yard. Get family members or the dog to model for you as you check the lighting and backgrounds before your loved ones come calling.

Lights, cameras, and more lights… it's great to have everyone jammed at the tree or by the fire, but that setting makes autofocus go crazy, so get your subjects about five feet from the tree so that the lights take on a soft, out-of-focus glow instead of becoming a harsh backdrop.

The posed picture. They're great, in theory. But trying to squeeze everyone in the shot, getting them to stand up straight and smile perfectly leads to the, "Wait, where's Aunt Gert?" moment. Which leads to fidgety kids, cranky adults and the passing of a nice moment. Catch people in conversation, in laughter, in genuine moments. And if you are going for the group shot, practice beforehand with your auto-timer. Hey, you're doing all the work; don't you deserve to be in a few of these photos?

The moment after… Keep your finger on the shutter. Nabbing a photo right when people relax from their forced camera-ready smile will capture their personalities.

THE FINISHED PRODUCT

Whatever you shoot, don't let your digital photos languish on your hard drive or flash card. Now and then, organize your photos so you can display and enjoy them. Have prints made. Burn some images, burn them onto a DVD so you can watch them on your hi-def TV together. Have special events or vacations printed into a hardbound book. Remember those old Kodak magazine ads, where the family is sitting together, reliving memories through photos? It's a great reminder of why you got that fancy camera in the first place. Enjoy these moments, together.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?

More from Encino-Tarzana