Photographing Spring – Kids Online Photography Courses

Photographing Spring – Kids Online Photography Courses

Springtime is a season of renewal and growth, making it an excellent time to take photographs. Whether you’re a professional photographer or just starting, capturing the beauty of spring can be a fun and rewarding experience. In this blog post, we’ll give you some tips on how to photograph springtime and recommend our kids’ online

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What do you like to take photos of?

What do you like to take photos of?

We’re super excited to be back with a new term at Sharp Shots Photography Club! We hope you all enjoyed your New Year and are getting stuck in with those resolutions…This week we introduced some new faces and a few familiar ones to our cameras and asked them “What do they like to take photos

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Who Are You!

Who Are You!

We are back for the Autumn term! We have loved welcoming new and old faces to the clubs! Our theme this week was ‘Who Are You?’ This lesson helped our pupils think of creative ways to show who they are through a camera lens. We started with teaching them how to take a photograph, mentioning

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After school photography theme this week is: blur!

After school photography theme this week is: blur!

This week it was all about taking creative BLURRY images! We encouraged the children to shake the camera about as much as they could, to run with it across the field and to spin it in a circle (as long as they have the wrist string attached!) The best way for the students to capture

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Photographing Water!!

Photographing Water!!

In this wet session, the students learned how to capture water using our underwater cameras. We showed the kids the underwater setting and the action setting. The students used buckets, and water bottles to pour and slosh the water in various ways so they could capture interesting water shots. In this session the students learned

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Hide and Seek!

Hide and Seek!

This week our after school photography clubs theme was Hide and Seek. This lesson taught the children to really look for their image and introduced the idea of fun into their photographs too. They needed to pair up in groups of two or three and take “where’s wally” photographs. Their partners needed to hide, but

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