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Home | Arts & Entertainment | Photography When rechargeable batteries became generally available, the cost of using portable electronics went down considerably. Now, that savings seems like a fact of life, but by remembering a few things about batteries, you can save even more. New rechargeable batteries should be partially charged (in fact, mostly charged) when you buy them - but that doesn't mean they're ready for use. Manufacturer's generally recommend full charging before use, and some experienced users report that two or three full charge-discharge cycles before first use makes for the longest possible run time per charge. Temperature has some odd effects on batteries - for long-term storage the rumors are true: it is best to keep batteries cold, even frozen, to slow the gradual discharge that occurs in all batteries and keep them fresh. Think of batteries as an animal that can hibernate - the cold slows the "metabolism" of the battery. Museums are another market in the field of photographing pieces of art or historic artifacts. Museum artifact photography takes a serious and studied approach with a bit of artistic flare to assure the object or artwork is fully represented. Less artistic perhaps, but equally important are those thousands of people that need photographs taken of various objects from homes to cars to whatever they might be selling on E-bay this week. With your digital capture versatility, editing capabilities and print studio, you will find a variety of documentation needs professionally and artistically. Your editing studio may also include the tools to edit historic photographs. Thereby you could provide a building owner with an historic series of photographs of their buildings. Be sure to save at least two copies in different storage mediums of both the RAW and JPEG photograph if your digital camera has a RAW option. The JPEG photo can be instantly printed, e-mailed via computer and cell phone or posted on the Internet. One can take a photograph in Kansas City and within one minute it can be viewed by friends, family or business associates in Nepal or Colorado. Remember photography as an art and science was only discovered in the late 1800s. We have come a long way since then. With the capability to capture in RAW and instantly display in JPG, you may want to provide a full-color JPEG view on the Internet of the photographs you have archived in RAW. You could sell and or provide free use of some of your photographs to others. From art gallery quality presentations to free Internet gifs, there are many ways to share your photographs for fun and for money. The Internet is filling up with high quality stock photography sites that allow the amateur to the professional photographer ability to submit images for sale. These sites often offer royalty-free images that graphic designers for print; webmasters, and all photography buyers do not have to pay any additional fees on any subsequent usage of the images. Commercial and non-commercial designers can use the photos or digi art you submit for many different types of projects. After you have had a day in the sunshine taking lots of excellent photographs or a day at a conference with your digital camera, and you have returned to your home or office to process and distribute your new photographs. You, now, have the opportunity to transform your photographs to well-structured archives, presentations, books, artwork, gifts or retail products. Article Source: http://www.articlewheel.com
Issues with your digital camera? Learn more about your fantastic new camera Get rid of the confusion and read this report on taking family photos.
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