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photographers cheat sheets

LIGHTING BASICS CAMERA SETTINGS EXPOSURE MODES SHARPER IMAGES IN CAMERA


PLUS LINKS TO HUNDREDS OF FREE TUTORIALS, TEMPLATES, DOWNLOADS AND MORE!

by gayle vehar from mom and camera for friends of pretty presets for lightroom

SIDE LIGHT & FRONT LIGHT


Any window or door can work as a great indoor light
source. Photographers generally prefer south-facing
windows and doors. BUT, any window that doesnt have
sun streaming directly into the window will work. You
can tell if there is light streaming in by looking at the
floor around the window and seeing if there are any
defined patches of light. If there are, check back later to

see if they are gone. If the light is nice and diffused with
defined patches of light, YAY! It is the perfect time to shoot.
You will likely have to raise your ISO a bit to get a nice
exposure. Dont be afraid to do this. Your photo will be
better quality and have less grain if you raise your ISO
and get nice exposure, than if you underexpose and
have to lighten the shot with post-processing.

SIDE LIGHT

FRONT LIGHT

Side window light has the window light coming from


90is degrees to the side of the photographer and your
subject.

Front window light has your subject facing the window


or door and you the photographer with your back in
front of the light source or outside the door.

This lighting is very dramatic light with more shadow


and definition than front light.

This is a simple, soft, even light. This type of light will


darken the background since your subject is closer to
the light than the background is.

A reflector can help to even out some of the dramatic


light if you find it too harsh.

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 1

BACKLIGHT & SUNLIGHT

BACKLIGHT

SUNLIGHT

Backlight is best shot in manual mode. (In fact, it is one


of the best reasons to learn to use it.)

Mid-day sunlight is also best shot on manaual mode.


(Anytime you are shooting shadows and highlights,
manual should be your first choice!)

Use spot metering or take your meter readings with only


the face in your frame. Backlight will easily trick your
cameras light meter and cause an underexposed photo.
Haze and sunflare can easily happen with back light. They
are the result of light streaming directly into your lens.

Position yourself so that your subject is looking into their


own shadow (you can use some of the tips for back light
here) to keep nice, even lighting on the face and avoid
raccoon eyes from overhead sun.

Encourage haze and sunflare by including the sun in your


frame or placing the sun directly behind your subject.

Having your subject look away from the camera can also
be a great way to minimize the distraction of the midday sun.

Avoid haze and sunflare by keeping the sun out of your


frame and placing it slightly to the left or right of your
subject instead of directly behind them.

Avoid bright blown-out highlights and deep shadows on


the face. Not only are they distracting, but they are hard
to post-process.

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 2

CLOUDY & SHADE

CLOUDY

SHADE

Cloudy days provide gorgeous even light almost


anytime of day and any location.

Shade is beautiful even light, too. On a sunny day, a


spot of shade can provide beautiful light and a bit of
variety.

Beware of dull gray skies. Cloudy days give you lots of


gray sky that isnt very interesting in photos. Keep the
sky out of photos and take advantage of other beautiful
backgrounds you might not otherwise get the most from
on a super-sunny day.
As a total contradiction, the exception to the above is
stormy skies. They can be interesting and dramatic!
Watch your shutter speed and make sure it doesnt get
too slow. With limited light on overcast or stormy days,
this can be a problem.

When photographing in the shade, place your subject


fairly close to the edge of the shade so they are looking
out toward an area of sunlight. This will help keep
catchlights in the eyes.
Avoid the shade from trees, which is generally splotchy
with bright areas in random places. It is distracting in
photos to have bright patches falling on your subject.
The light in shady areas tends to be blue in color. Adjust
your white balance to the shade or cloudy setting to fix
this.

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 3

CAMERA SETTINGS
manual
mode
where to start
making the most of your camera settings

Confused about where to start with your manual settings for different lighting conditions?
Try these guidelines to give you a starting place!
Confused about where to start with your manual settings?
Try these guidelines to give you a starting place!

Bright
Sun
BRIGHT SUN

ISO
100-200
ISO: 100-200 Aperture:
f/12
or lower // aperture f/1.2 or lower // shutter speed 1/100 or faster
Shutter Speed: 1/100 or faster

Cloudy
CLOUDY

ISO 400-800 // aperture f/5.6 or lower // shutter speed 1/60 or faster

ISO: 400-800 Aperture: f/5.6 or lower


Shutter Speed: 1/60 or faster

Shade
SHADE

ISO 400-800
aperture f/5.6 or lower // shutter speed 1/80 or faster
ISO: 400-800 Aperture:
f/5.6 or//lower
Shutter Speed: 1/80 or faster

Window
WINDOW

ISO 800-1000
// aperture f/4 or lower // shutter speed 1/80 or faster
ISO: 800-1000 Aperture:
f/4 or lower
Shutter Speed: 1/80 or faster

Indoors
INDOORS

ISO 1600-3200 // aperture f/4 or lower // shutter speed 1/80 or faster

ISO: 1600-3200 Aperture: f/4 or lower


Shutter Speed: 1/80 or faster
2013 Gayle Vehar www.momandcamera.com FOR

Pretty Presets www.lightroompresets.com

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 4

BOKEH

WANT MORE BOKEH IN YOUR PHOTOS?


These three simple tips will help!

APERTURE

FOCAL LENGTH

D I S TA N C E

Choose an open aperture (or low


f-stop number) between f/1.8 and
f/5.6. The lower the f-stop number,
the less depth of field (or how much
of your photo is in focus). This is
the #1 way to get nice bokeh in the
background.

Choose longer focal lengths (50mm or


higher). Longer focal lengths allow you
less depth of field. The less depth of
field you have, the more background
blur will be present in your photos.

Keep your background far behind


your audience. The greater the
distance your subject is from the
background, the more out of focus
it will be. Also, the closer you are to
your subject, the more out of focus
the background will be.

BONUS: Still not getting the results you want? Multiply your results by combining them!

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 5

SHARPER PHOTOS IN CAMERA

1. FOCUS IN THE RIGHT PLACE


Make sure that you have your focus set to the most
important part of the photo. For people subjects,
choose the eyes as the spot to focus. If your subject is
not a person choose the area of your frame that tells the
story of your photo.
2. FOCUS POINT: CHOOSE WHERE YOU FOCUS
Which brings us to our next tipchoose your focus
point instead of allowing the camera to choose it. Set
the camera to single point focusing. If your camera
allows it, move the focus point around as necessary to
ensure the focus is just where you want it.
3. GOOD LIGHT ALL THE TIME
The camera needs good light in order to grab a good
focus. The more light you have the better. Use any light
that makes you happyjust make sure that the eyes are
well lit on your people subjects (catchlights are a good
way to judge this) and that there is enough light available for the AF to grab a good focus.
4. KEEP THE SHUTTER SPEED FAST
Keeping a fast shutter speed will help keep your photos
sharp. When photographing kids, try to keep the shutter
speed above 1/200 whenever possible. For other shots,
keep your shutter speed at least the same as your focal
length (i.e. focal length 100mm = 1/100 shutter speed.

5. DEPTH OF FIELD
It takes practice to shoot at open apertures like f/1.8.
When first shooting at these apertures, some think their
photos are out of focus. The reality is generally that
something in the photo is in focus but it isnt what you
intended. Practice and being specific about where you
are focusing will help get your focus right.
6. SAY NO TO FOCUS AND RECOMPOSE
Whenever you are shooting at an aperture f/2.0 or wider
and close to your subject DONT lock in your focus and
recompose the shot. With such a wide
aperture there isnt any room for error. Youll get better
results by moving your focus point over the closest eye.
7. ISO AS LOW AS POSSIBLE
ISO doesnt really affect sharpness, but images shot
at high ISOs often dont look as sharp because of the
noise/grain that high ISOs show. Keep your ISO as low
as possible without sacrificing a good exposure.
8. LENSES CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE
A nicer lens will generally give you sharper photos.
Kit lenses (i.e. an 18-55 f/3.5-5.6) are made with
inexpensive glass. Exceptions are the Canon 50mm 1.8
and the Nikon 50mm 1.8. Both are sharp lenses with an
inexpensive price tag.

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 6

PHOTO BASICS

APERTURE

SHUTTER SPEED

ISO

Aperture controls how much light


enters through the camera lens. The
more you open your aperture, the

Shutter speed controls how long the


light entering the aperture exposes
the sensor. The faster the shutter

ISO numbers measure how sensitive


the camera sensor is to light. Lower
ISO numbers (100, 200, 400) mean

less depth of field. The more closed


your aperture, the more depth of
field.

speed, the sharper the image. Shooting at lower shutter speeds requires a
strong stance, steady hand and easy
breathing (you can even hold your
breath).

the camera sensor is less sensitive


to light. Higher ISO numbers (800,
1600+) mean the camera sensor is
more sensitive to light.

open apertures

lower f-stop numbers like: f/2.0, f/2.8,


f/3.5

rule of thumb

less grain or noise

closed apertures

You can handhold the camera when


your shutter speed is 1/focal length.

higher iso numbers

higher f-stop numbers like: f/11, f/16,


f/22

lower iso numbers

more grain or noise


shutter speeds

slow: 1, 1/20, 1/50 fast: 1/125,


1/500, 1/1000

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 7

EXPOSURE MODES

canon

nikon

This is the mode for when you want to take a picture and not think about a
thing. In this mode the camera does everything for you.
auto mode

This setting still chooses everything for you but wont pop up the flash.
This is good for places where flash isnt allowed. However, beware of blurry photos.
auto no flash

In this mode the camera tries to pick an open aperture to throw the
background out of focus. It also softens the skin tones in the photo.
portrait mode

This mode chooses a closed(ish) aperture to maximize depth of field.


It is intended for use in daylight. A tripod should be used in low light.
landscape mode

Keeps photos colorful and vivid and skin tones soft. This mode also tries to
choose a fast enough shutter speed to keep children in focus. (Not available on Canon.)
child mode

This mode switches off the flash and the camera chooses fast shutter speeds
to help freeze action.
sports mode

close-up mode

This mode helps you take close-up photos. Nikon chooses a small aperture;
Canon a wide one. A tripod is recommended.
This setting combines the on-camera flash and a slow shutter speed to
make use of the available light as well as light up the photo with flash.
night portrait mode

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 8

SKILL-BUILDING TUTORIALS, FREEBIES & MORE!

Here are the best tutorials, templates, cheat sheets, tips & tricks and business advice
we can find to help you build your skills, boost your business savvy and improve your
marketing. All Pretty Presets for Lightroom approved. (Just click and go!)

TECH & GEAR TIPS


1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

RAW and JPEG: The Lowdown! {Part 1}


RAW+JPEG: Should You? {Part 2}
15 Everyday Items That Belong in Your
Camera Bag
What are Aperture and Shutter Speed
Making filters work to your advantage

6.
7.
8.
9.

What Accessories Are You Missing Out On?


Why Use a Tripod?
4 Tips for Sharper Images
Tips for Editing a RAW Image

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Back Button Focusing Tips


How Can Spot Metering Help You?
What Is White Balance?
What Kind of Camera Gear Do I Need?
What Digital Camera Should I Buy?
Full Frame vs Crop Sensor - Which One is Right
For You?
Monitor Calibration: Is Your Monitor Calibrated?
Free Download: Getting Started With Your
DSLR 101
How To Recover Deleted Files
How to use your HD Video on your DSLR
10 Great Christmas Ideas for Photographers

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 9

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10 amazing gifts for any Photographer


(and family)
Why Do Photographers Who Own DSLRs Take
So Many Photos on Their Phones?
How To Get Started With Freelensing
Free Cheat Sheet: Learn To Read
Your Camera Lens

LEARN LIGHTROOM
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LR vs PS: Still not sure? 5 ways Lightroom will


speed up your workflow
Using the adjustment brush in Lightroom
How are they different? RAW vs JPEG
Customizing Your Presets
Lightroom Brushes Class
Lightrooms Magic Targeted Adjustment Brush
Lightroom Workshop + Clean and Creative
Editing Workshop
Using Presets In Adobe Camera Raw
Sharpening In Lightroom
Brightness vs Exposure vs Fill Light in Lightroom
How Lightrooms Spot Healing Tool Saved My Life
To-Go Workshop: Clean and Creative Editing
in Lightroom
Creating web galleries in Lightroom
Vibrance vs. Saturation in Lightroom
Correcting ColorJust Where You Want It!
How to Restore Old Photos in Photoshop
and Lightroom
Playing Favorites in Lightroom
Reducing Noise in High ISO Photos
3 Ways To Add Contrast To Your Photos
KC Photography using Pretty Presets to edit

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Learn now to use Vignetting in Lightroom


Crave Photography using Pretty Presets to edit
How to use Graduated Filters in Lightroom
Getting Started in Lightroom Mini-Workshop
Memories N More Wedding Photography using
Pretty Presets to edit
Pretty Preset Brushes and Graduated Filters
Overview of Lightroom Workshops To Go
Learning about your Library and Develop Module
Questions and Answers about the
Lightroom 4 release
Lightroom 4 - Changes to the Basic Panel
Speeding up your workflow in Lightroom!
How to use Lightroom 3 Presets in Lightroom 4
Using Graduated Filters in Lightroom
Meet Brooke Logue Photography +
Pretty Preset Edits
All about Light: Make lighting work for you, not
against you!
Lightroom 4--New Adjustment Panel Options
Turning your Photos to Black and White in
Lightroom
Lightroom 4 -The new RGB Curve
Lightroom Workshop To Go for Beginners
(Lightroom 4)
Clean and Creative Webinar for Beginners in
Lightroom 4
4 Easy Steps for Creating a Watermark in
Lightroom
How to Customize the Spring Color, Flare & Haze
Collection for JPEG!
New Brushes for Lightroom 4
Introduction to Resizing in Lightroom
Spring Color, Flare & Haze for JPEG
Getting the Most Out of the New Video Feature
in Lightroom

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 10

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Cropping in Lightroom
Liberating Your Lightroom Files: Exporting
Portfolio Building for Photographers
Portfolio Building for Photographers Part Two
Dreamy Baby Collection for Lightroom 4 RAW
Dreamy Baby and Spring Color, Flare & Haze Edits
Editing Newborns with Pretty Presets for
Lightroom
Histograms and Lightroom
5 Ways to Enhance a Boring Location
Time Travel in Lightroom [or All About
Lightrooms History Panel]
Free Printable: Lightroom 4 Shortcuts
Having Fun With the Pretty Presets Post Presets
How to use Lightroom Presets, Brushes and
Graduated Filters
3 Simple Steps to Using Your Lightroom 3
Pretty Presets in Lightroom 4
Workflow Set + Free Webinar on Lightroom
Presets, Brushes & Graduated Filters
How to Fix Missing or Offline Photos
in Lightroom
The 2 Biggest Differences Between
Lightroom 3 and Lightroom 4
5 Tips for Working with the Graduated Filter
Whos Afraid of Lightroom 4 (And Why You
Shouldnt Be!)
5 Tips for Using Lightrooms Adjustment Brush Tool
5 Tips for Getting Started with Lightroom 4
3 Ways to Rename Your Files in Lightroom
7 Free Presets for Sharpening in Lightroom
15 Frequently Asked Questions on Pretty Presets
Best Lightroom Presets for Lightroom 4 and 5 Top Selling Lightroom Presets
Lightroom Presets: Pretty Pastels Collection for
Lightroom 4

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How to Install Lightroom Presets and


Lightroom Brushes
How to Handle RAW+JPEG in Lightroom? {Part 3}
Clean and Creative Editing in Lightroom
Retro Rock-n-Roll Portrait Collection
Lightroom Brushes: Learning about Flow & Density
Top 5 Mistakes Made When Installing Lightroom
Presets
Quick Edits using Lightroom Brushes and
Graduated Filters
How to Upgrade to Lightroom 4
Fine Art Film Collection for Lightroom 4 and
Lightroom 5
3 Lightroom Settings to Change Right Now
Lightroom: The Photographers Tool
Pretty Presets Best Seller Bundle for Lightroom 4
and Lightroom 5
Top 5 Questions About Upgrading to
Lightroom 5
Resizing for Facebook in Lightroom
The New Lightroom 5s 4 Big Features
4 Lesser-Known New Features in Lightroom 5
Lightroom 5 Presets | Workflow Collection
Lightroom 5 Presets | Dreamy Baby Collection
and Newborn Brush Bundle
Free Lightroom Webinar for Beginners
Editing in Lightroom 5
5 Tips for Getting Started With Lightroom 5
Editing Newborns in Lightroom using
Pretty Presets
Clean and Creative Editing in Lightroom 5
What is DNG? And Why You Might Consider
Using It.
Adding Copyright Metadata to Your Photos in
Lightroom
Fine Art Film Collection Edits

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 11

123. Lightroom 5 Healing and Cloning Tool Updates


124. 3 Tips to Improving Your Workflow in Lightroom 5
125. Clean and Creative Advanced Workflow
Collection
126. Top 3 Most Downloaded Lightroom Presets
127. How to use Lightroom Brushes and Graduated
Filters
128. Dont have Lightroom? Start today!
129. 3 Steps to Transfer Your Pretty Presets to
a New Computer
130. Customizing Your Presets
131. We Want Your Feedback
132. 3 Reasons to Choose Brushes Whenever Possible
133. Tips for Organizing your Presets
134. Merging Lightroom Catalogs
135. Editing In Lightroom
136. How to Layer Lightroom Presets
137. How to Edit Pictures in Lightroom
138. Importing, Exporting and Using
Watermarks in Lightroom
139. A Creative Edit: From Drab to Fab
140. 10 Ways To Maximize Your Lightroom Experience
141. 5 Tips for Perfecting your Portrait Workflow
142. Snapshots vs. Virtual Copies: When and Why to
Use Each One
143. How to Smooth Skin In Lightroom
144. How to Whiten Eyes & Teeth in Lightroom
145. 2 Steps to a Matte Black and White Edit
146. A Simple Edit with Brushes and Presets
147. Tips for Editing a RAW Image
148. How to Enhance Eyes in Lightroom
149. Lightroom for Beginners Webinar
150. Intermediate Lightroom Class - Recorded
Webinar
151. A Nature Photo Edit in Lightroom
152. A Spring Photo Edit in Lightroom (Using Spring

153.
154.
155.
156.
157.

Color, Flare and Haze)


How Lightrooms Collections Can Save You Time
Advanced Lightroom Webinar
Fixing Under-Eye Circles in Lightroom
What is a Lightroom Catalog?
Did You Lose Something in Lightroom?

How to get it back!


158. Lightroom Tool TipMastering the Brush Tool
159. 5 Tips for Getting Started With Lightroom 5
160. Importing, Exporting and Using Watermarks in
Lightroom
161. Clean and Creative Webinar for Beginners in
Lightroom 4
162. A Simple Edit from the Pretty Pastels Collection
163. 4 Easy Steps for Creating a Watermark in
Lightroom
164. Getting the Most Out of the New Video Feature
in Lightroom
165. 5 Lightroom Tips You Cant Live Without
166. How to use Lightroom Presets, Brushes and
Graduated Filters
167. 3 Simple Steps to Using Your Lightroom 3 Pretty
Presets in Lightroom 4 & 5
168. Lightroom Presets, Brushes & Graduated Filters
169. How to Install Lightroom Presets and Lightroom
Brushes
170. 7 Free Presets for Sharpening in Lightroom
171. LR vs PS: Still not sure? 5 ways Lightroom will
speed up your workflow
172. Free Printable: Lightroom 4 Shortcuts

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 12

PHOTO BASICS

BETTER SESSIONS

173. The Rule of Thirds


174. Bokeh Tips and Tricks
175. 4 Tips to Instantly Make Your Photography Look
More Professional: Part I
176. 4 Tips to Instantly Make Your Photography Look
More Professional: Part II
177. Tips and Tricks to taking Black and White Photos
178. How to take a Self Portrait
179. 7 Tips to Capturing the Details
180. Experimenting With Focus
181. Free Exposure Cheat Sheet
182. Free Printable: Bokeh Tip Sheet
183. 7 Free Photography Cheat Sheets!
184. Free Download: Manual Mode Cheat Sheet
185. Free Download: Automatic Exposure Modes
Cheat Sheet

195. 10 Steps Towards a Fun Client Shoot


196. First Newborn Photoshoot, From a Photographer
Who Mainly Photographs Adults
197. Finding the Perfect Location for your Portrait Session
198. 7 Steps to a Successful Boudoir Session
199. 5 Ways to Enhance a Boring Location
200. 6 Tips for Taking Better Pictures in the City
201. 6 Tips to Better Beach Photography
202. How to Photograph a Silhouette
203. 6 Tips to Photographing Your Clients in Public
204. 5 Tips for Photographing Fall
205. 5 Tips for Taking Photographs in the Snow
206. What to Wear to a Photo Shoot + A
Free Shopping Guide
207. 5 Tips for Photographing During Summer Months
208. Top 6 Posing Apps for Photographers
209. 5 Posing Solutions for Every Photographer
210. 6 Tips For Your Boudoir Session
211. How to Photograph Your Own Children
212. Photographing Your Kids: Tips for Taking Better
Photographs of Your Kids and Family
213. 4 Things Being a Bride Taught Me about
Wedding Photography
214. 9 Lessons Learned As A New Wedding
Photographer
215. Challenge: Give the Kids the Camera
216. Tips and Tricks to Pet Photography
217. Discovering Your Newborn Lifestyle Photography
218. 3 Reasons You To Start A Photo Project
219. The Art of iPhoneography
220. Free Posing Guide: Posing Tips for Toddlers
221. Free Posing Guide: Posing Tips for Kids
222. Free Posing Guide: Posing Tips for Families

ALL ABOUT LIGHT


186.
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190.
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192.
193.
194.

Free Printable: Window Lighting Tips


Getting Started with Off-Camera Flash: Part One
Getting Started with Off-Camera Flash: Part Two
Can You Photograph People in the
Harsh Midday Sun?
4 Easy Tips for Taking Advantage of the
Golden Hour
Maximizing the Light for Indoor Lifestyle Photos
Backlight: Illumination from Behind
6 On-Camera Flash Tips
Free Printable: Backlight and Sunlight

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 13

BUSINESS TIPS
& RESOURCES
223. What is a Professional Photographer?
224. All about Consistency and why you need it!
225. 5 Things To Consider When Starting Your Photography Business
226. Big Business vs Small Business
227. The Importance of Insurance for Your Business
228. Free Pinterest Webinar
229. Branding for Photographers
230. Your Website and Web Presence
231. Pricing Your Photography
232. 8 Tips For Becoming the Perfect Second Shooter
233. Budgeting Tips + Free Budgeting Worksheet
234. Should I Watermark My Images?
235. 3 Tips for Gaining More Referrals
236. 3 Mistakes and Lessons Learned as a
Photographer
237. Six Important Things I Have Learned in
the Past Two Years
238. Client Tracker for Photographers
239. Free Download - Weekly Blog Planner
240. Free Pricing Sheet and Invoice Download for
Photographers
241. Free Client Tracker Worksheet for Photographers

THE NEWBIE
CHRONICLES
242. 5 Photography Tips for Beginners: Part One
243. 5 Photography Tips for Beginners: Part Two
244. You Might Be A New Photographer If...

245. Introduction to Newbie Chronicles: Tips for the


Novice Photographer
246. The Newbie Chronicles: Legal Advice for
Photographers
247. The Newbie Chronicles: Shooting in Manual

MARKETING & SALES


T E M P L AT E S &
DOWNLOADS
248. Free Referral Cards for Your Photography
Business
249. Beautiful Pretty Presets Templates for Free and
Instant Download
250. Exclusive Pretty Preset Paper Pack Download
251. Free Pretty Presets Timeline Covers
252. Exclusive Free Valentines Day Storyboards
253. Free Printable: Speeding up your workflow in the
kitchen this week
254. Free Download: Christmas Card and
Gift Checklists
255. Free Gift: 8x10 Spring Marketing Template for
Mini-Sessions
256. 10 Mothers Day Gift Ideas for the Mom
and Photographer In Your Life
257. Free Printable: Mommy Bucks for You or the
Mother In Your Life
258. Free Template: Spring Package Pricing
for Photographers
259. Free Photographer Business Cards
260. Free Business Card for Photographers
Free Digital Paper Pack from Pretty Presets Celebrating 100,000 Friends on Facebook

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 14

261. Free Facebook Timeline Templates - Create Your


Own Promotion!
262. 12 Free Digital Papers for Thanksgiving and
Christmas
263. 4 Free Christmas Cards
264. 12 Free Digital Papers for Valentines Day
265. 3 Free Valentines Day Cards
266. Photography Quotes to Inspire You Today
267. Summer Bucket List
268. Free Pretty Presets Before and After Template

PRETTY PRESETS THE ULTIMATE SET OF PHOTOGRAPHERS CHEAT SHEETS 15

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