Featuring the Beautiful Photos of Bruce Campbell
Bruce is a NAUI dive instructor and an avid underwater photographer who began diving 16 years ago. He has been...
Bruce is a NAUI dive instructor and an avid underwater photographer who began diving 16 years ago. He has been...
One of the most powerful techniques a photographer can use to tell a story is composition. “A picture is worth a thousand words…” but only if it has something to say. Composition is one of the keys to story telling through imaging. The way you show the subject, secondary subject and environment gives the image the context in which to tell your story.
2019 was a great year for photo ops. Enjoy this short review! Join me for a workshop! Travel to a...
The last few years have been productive for me in terms of having lots of opportunities to photograph sharks. I...
Many divers and underwater photographers love to explore the ambiance created by sunlight piercing through small openings to illuminate caves...
This post is intended to be a gateway to different aspects of macro photography. There are many links; each leading...
Please enjoy this video tutorial on how to use light effectively in underwater photography. Join me for a workshop! Travel...
A thrill went through me as I listened to the briefing before the dive. This dive would be a singular experience, rare as a hen’s tooth, and one I had anticipated for several years. Happening just once a year, by the light of the full moon, an event of epic proportions takes place in the South Pacific.
Close Focus Wide Angle Photographs are one of the must haves in an underwater photography portfolio. We see the technique showcased in magazines, advertisements, and plastered all over social media. It is arguably the most important photographic technique in underwater photography. But what, exactly, does CFWA mean, and how does one make an impact using this technique?
The ocean is full of wonderful and amazing animals, some of which defy our imagination. These colorful and sometimes weird looking critters demand our attention to detail, especially when it comes to photographing them. If the lighting isn’t spot on, or the composition is poor, a potentially fantastic shot will
To some, scuba diving may seem like an extreme sport, while others view it as a relaxing activity. But a new adrenaline rush is emerging in the scuba community as one of the “must do” activities in the sport, especially among underwater photographers. It is called Blackwater diving.
As a new diver, Brook Peterson came to appreciate the beauty
of the underwater world, but not all diving is rainbow reefs and
unicorn fish. Muck diving is just what it sounds like: scuba diving
over an a barren seafloor covered in rubble, dead coral and
even man-made trash. Read on as Brook writes about her first
encounter with the intrinsic beauty hidden in the muck