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Overview

Through several easy-to-follow lessons, this handy book offers a complete class on digital photography, tailored specifically for people who use the Canon EOS Digital Rebel XS/1000D. This is not your typical camera guide: rather than just show you what all the buttons do, this book teaches you how to use various Digital Rebel XS/1000D features to make great photographs -- including professional-looking images of people, landscapes, action shots, close-ups, night shots, and more.

  • Take creative control and go beyond automatic settings

  • Learn the basic rules of composition

  • Capture decisive moments, including fast-moving objects

  • Discover ways to use a flash indoors and outdoors

  • Learn about different lenses, and the best time to use them

  • Understand the options for shooting RAW, and whether it's right for you

There are plenty of photography books, but only this one teaches you how to take high-quality digital photos using the exact camera model you own. Plenty of full-color examples show you what's possible once you graduate from snapshots and focus on the pictures you really want to take.

The Canon EOS Digital Rebel XS/1000D Companion is the perfect reference for your camera bag. Written by professional photographer Ben Long, it's packed with creative tips and technical advice to help you capture stunning pictures anywhere, anytime. With this book, you'll learn how to:

Amazon.com® Reader Reviews (Ranked by Helpfulness)

Average Amazon.com® Rating: 3.5 out of 5 rating Based on 3 Ratings

Good book for XSi, not XS...hur?..The author mixed up with XSi - 2009-04-30
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
It is a pretty good book. However it was not written from the scratch. It is very much "find/replace" XSi with XS from the previous XSi edition. The book failed to differential XSi and XS and used XSi features on XS. For example, XSi has 9 focus points and XS has 7 focus points. The book repeatedly using 9 focus points. Don't take me wrong. It is a good book as long as you have done enough research and understand the differences between XSi and XS.

Great Help - 2009-04-18
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
I got a Digital SLR for Christmas and signed up for classes at the local community college. This was the best book by far of any one else in the class. Very well written. Very easy to understand. I still reference it when I have forgotten what settings I need. I also ordered another book and it is not nearly as good. Nice examples of the pictures you may want to try to capture.

A Good Starting Point - 2009-08-27
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
The Canon EOS Rebel cameras are basically entry-level DSLR cameras. If this is your situation and you recently purchased a Rebel XS--known as the 1000D outside of the U.S.--you may want to get this book. This book is a beginner book that is specific to your camera. It's a good book with which to start.

There are twelve chapters to this moderate sized book. The reader is given some very helpful screen shots of camera menus, as well as the displays that one will see through the viewfinder (i.e., the eyepiece) and on the LCD viewer screen. There are full-color images showing the camera with easy to understand text and lines pointing to exactly what to press or turn to set various things on the camera.

Getting to It
In the first few chapters, the author Ben Long teaches the reader about the camera in general: Chapter 1 shows the reader exactly what to do to get started taking pictures. It includes pictures of the switches on the camera and the lens and screen shots of the menus. The second chapter provides a well illustrated tour of the camera. Knowing where everything is on your camera will make you more comfortable using it. There's also information on the care and cleaning of the camera.

The third chapter covers how to view images and manipulate images within the camera. Many of these things you may figure out on your own, though. In the next chapter the author discusses how to copy images to a computer. This includes using the Canon utility program on Microsoft Windows and Macintosh computers, providing screen shots for both.

Photography Basics
The author turns his attention to teaching the reader about photography in general in Chapter 5 by discussing the basics components of exposure: ISO (i.e., sensitivity of the image sensor), shutter speed, and aperture (i.e., how wide the lens is opened). From there, in Chapter 6, he explains how to take pictures using a non-automatic mode. He covers the different methods of focusing, setting camera sensitivity, and adjusting white balance (i.e., image coloring based on lighting).

In the following chapter Long discusses the light meter and other exposure information provided by the camera. He gives advice on how to improve the camera exposure for the best lighting of the final images. In Chapter 8, he steps away from camera specifics a bit and explains how to compose a photograph--where to position the subject or the camera for the best shot.

Other Stuff
In Chapter 9, Long talks about using the live view mode (i.e., using the LCD panel for taking shots). He also speaks a little about taking panoramic photos and images in low lighting. These three topics seem to be loosely pasted together. Chapter 10 is about using the built-in flash and an external flash. There's not much to this chapter, but maybe it's enough for a beginner since Long explains how to deal with red-eye and how not to overexposure people with the flash. Those are the main problems of beginners.

Chapter 11 talks about the advantages and some steps involved in using the RAW image format. Most beginners probably shouldn't add it to their list of things to learn. The final chapter explains how to customize the 'My Menu' page. It also has a few pages on lenses: helping to decide which additional ones to buy. I'm not sure why Long didn't make a separate chapter for lenses and provide more information on them. Of course, most beginners don't think about getting a second lens for quite some time, at least a year.

Overall Thoughts & Reading Guide
Again, if you just bought a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XS (or 1000D) and you're new to using a camera like this, you should buy this book and read it. If you do, I recommend taking your time and starting from the beginning of the book. Play with the camera along the way. If you're going to skip around and not read all of the book, I recommend skipping chapters 9, 11, and 12. If you want to lighten your reading load even more, you can probably skim chapters 3 and 4--reading only what catches your eye.

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