this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2023
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Photography

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Hello,

I'm a beginner in photography and was looking at online course to improve faster than all by myself.

Few months ago I discovered Pierre T Lambert youtube channel and saw that he is doing an online photo course. Does someone followed it? How is it? It's expensive (a little more than 300€ during black friday, so basicly a prime lens for my camera) but I could join it if I would improve a lot faster.

I mostly want to improve my eye then the technical aspect.I also want to learn about editing with Darktable. I'm aware that he use Lightroom in his course but I am a free software guy and run Linux everywhere, so I must learn how to edit with Darktable.

I'm French by the way, and this is why I would follow his French course. I could follow another one in English but prefer in French.

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[–] JohannesVerne@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

It's in english, but there's the r/photoclass that's going to be starting in just over a month. It's free, well planned out, and there's a number of mentors that will be helping to give more personalized feedback than you generally get with a shorter course. There's also the benefit of being a full year, so it's not trying to condense everything down to the bare minimum (or leaving it out entirely) just to fit it in the course.

While I haven't taken Pierre's course, most of the "learn photography in one month!" courses just throw the same basics out there that you can already find for free on youtube or learn just by practicing. They're too condensed to really teach much, and even when they manage to cover the basics it's not the most in-depth or practical way to learn. There's just too much in photography that relies on practicing consistently to internalize to really learn in just a month.

[–] frenchy_runner@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Thank you, I'll join r/photoclass

I agree the process will be more enjoyable during a full year if I can stick with it!

[–] redditchy@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Everything these courses offer, you can get for free fairly easily. There are no secrets that can only be discovered behind a paywall.

[–] Strange_Unicorn@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

As a beginner I would invest in books such as Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson. I'm not a fan of most online courses because you essentially become a so-so clone of the teacher. In person is nice when you can shoot with them and get instant feedback.

[–] frenchy_runner@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

thank you for the recommendation, I'll check it out this book. Do you know if there is a lot more between the 3rd and 4th edition?

It seems I can get the 3rd in second hand here.

[–] trafficlight068@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

You can learn the basics of photography relatively quickly with YouTube or books, but the part that no one can teach you is going out and practicing, even if it seems futile at first. Just like with any hobby or craft, practice makes 90% of it

[–] mikusmikus@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

That's way to much for a course, just because it's expensive doesn't mean it's good. Watch free videos, you'll learn as much.

And then go use your camera, play with settings. Try different things. You'll learn more that way. It's ok to not know everything, you'll learn more over time, than you will with some over priced course.