The Art of Photography with Wi-Fi Capabilities
I want to give a special shout out and thanks to the folks at Linda.com for once again sponsoring another episode of The Art of Photography. Their support is greatly appreciated, and I'm grateful for their willingness to help us share our passion for photography with others. As always, I'll be speaking to the Sony cameras in this video, but I want to note that other camera manufacturers have also incorporated Wi-Fi capabilities into their camera models or will soon do so.
This feature has been a game-changer for me and my workflow. No longer do I have to manually transfer images from my camera to my computer or worry about the hassle of connecting via USB or memory cards. With Wi-Fi, I can simply connect my camera to my mobile device or laptop, and start browsing, editing, and sharing my images instantly. This has been a huge time-saver, especially when working on projects that require fast turnaround times.
One of the benefits of using Wi-Fi with your camera is its seamless integration into your workflow. You can easily share images with clients or collaborators via Dropbox or social media platforms like Instagram or Facebook. This feature is also particularly useful for photographers who need to work efficiently in the field, whether it's shooting weddings, events, or commercial projects. The ability to quickly review and adjust footage or images on a mobile device has been a lifesaver for me on many occasions.
Another advantage of Wi-Fi capabilities is the convenience they offer when working with multiple devices. For example, if you're editing an image on your laptop, you can easily transfer it to your phone for some quick adjustments before sending it back to the laptop for further editing. This level of flexibility has been invaluable in my work as a photographer and videographer.
Now, I know that Wi-Fi capabilities are not without their limitations. One of the main drawbacks is that they don't allow you to bring over raw images from your camera. Instead, the images are processed on the mobile device, which reduces the file size but also means that you can't work with unprocessed files directly. However, this limitation is minor compared to the many benefits that Wi-Fi capabilities offer.
In terms of user interface, I've found that Sony's implementation of Wi-Fi is somewhat inconsistent across their camera models. While some cameras have made significant improvements in this area, others still require a bit of tweaking to get everything working smoothly. That being said, I'm heartened by the fact that manufacturers are continually working to improve their interfaces and make them more user-friendly.
As we look to the future of photography and videography, I believe that Wi-Fi capabilities will play an increasingly important role in our work. Imagine having a camera that can seamlessly transmit images directly to your mobile device or laptop, allowing you to process and edit them on the go. This would be a game-changer for photographers and videographers who need to work efficiently in the field.
While we're not quite there yet, I'm excited to see where this technology is headed. Already, many camera manufacturers are incorporating Wi-Fi capabilities into their cameras or will soon do so. Apple and Android have made significant strides in this area, with seamless integration of mobile devices into their workflows. Now, it's up to the camera companies to catch up and make these features as user-friendly as possible.
Ultimately, I believe that the ultimate solution would be for cameras to handle all image-taking tasks, including processing raw images, and for mobile devices to take over sorting, proofing, and editing duties. Until then, Wi-Fi capabilities will remain an essential tool in our work as photographers and videographers. By embracing this technology, we can streamline our workflows, increase productivity, and create better images than ever before.
As always, I hope you guys have found this useful, and I encourage you to share your thoughts on Wi-Fi capabilities for cameras in the comments below. If you enjoyed this video, please hit the like button and subscribe to our channel for more content from The Art of Photography. Until next time, stay creative!
"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enwhat's up everybody Ted Forbes here welcome back to the Art of Photography I want to talk a little bit about the Wi-Fi capabilities today on the Sony RX100 Mark III this is a camera that I bought a couple months back I've absolutely fallen in love with this thing it is pocket sized it's amazing you can do all sorts of cool things with this and I did a pretty extensive review on this a couple episodes ago and I'll link to that in the show notes and at the end of the video if you're interested in watching that one thing I did not touch on very much in this review were the Wi-Fi capabilities of this camera and the reason I didn't talk about them very much is some of the previous Sony that I owned like the nx5 and such they had Wi-Fi capabilities but they were pretty bad and so I really kind of gave up on that as being anything useful and so when I picked up the ARX 100 Mark III kind of glossed it over and reviewed it as a camera and so that's what I've talked about before I've since gotten into this and tried it and it's really pretty cool and surprisingly very useful so come on over and I want to go up close with the Sony RX100 Mark II and check out how to use Wi-Fi with this so let's talk about about the Wi-Fi capabilities in the Sony and I will note that this works what I'm showing you here works pretty much across all the Sony's that I've got so the RX100 Mark II it works fine on the a7s I've had no trouble with a5100 I don't own an a6000 but I'm sure it works on that somebody might be able to chime in on the comments on that but I want to show you how this works and what's really cool is this is not well it's not going to replace your workflow with Lightroom and raw images and storage and all that um but what it does do is if you have images on your camera that you want to show a proof to a client uh you just want to have to check out on the smartphone really easily um you want to upload something via Dropbox maybe you want to share an image on social media this is an excellent way to get that going on and so what we're going to do is there's a setting I'm going to show you inside the camera that turns the camera into a Wi-Fi hotspot and all we do is we connect the phone there is a app that you need on here it is the Sony play memories app and it is available for Android and iOS definitely uh and it works pretty well so the first thing we're going to do is let's turn on the camera and I'm going to go into my menu settings here and under the Wi-Fi icon up here my first one is send a smartphone so what I'm going to do is I'm going to go ahead and select that then you get two options select on this device or select on the smartphone I actually like to do it from the smartphone so I'm going to select the second option so select from smartphone or on smartphone and I'm going to go ahead and Sue this it's going to Wi-Fi standby and then what it does is it creates a hot spot and this is the address you're going to look for and here's your password now I have connected to this before so it will remember my password I won't have to type that in uh but what I'm going to do is go ahead on my iPhone into the settings menu here I'm going to go under Wi-Fi and I'm going to whoops I'm going to select that direct-care and I am connected so I have connected to the camera via Wi-Fi I'm going to open the Sony play memories app and what it's going to do is it's there it is and here's some goofy photos of my cat Judy eating a cracker and so I want to bring one of those over to my smartphone what I do is I can select the entire date and it will select all the images or I can just select one whatever I want to do I can say copy and it's going to copy the image boom done items copied you can copy as many images as you want now what that does is that it actually is going to go in here and it's going to put that image onto your camera roll is the last image being taken so there we go Judy eating a cracker and so I am able to all of a sudden view my images on my smartphone and I can do whatever I want cuz it put that on the camera rule so if I want upload that to Instagram if I want to put it on Facebook if I want to upload to Dropbox and just get a little proof copy somewhere I'm able to do all that so very cool stuff I'm going to go ahead and disconnect and I want to talk a little more about it because I'm going and cancel out of that there's a couple other options that you have and there's also some stuff that is a little disappointing about the app the other thing is you can transfer video as well and I'm going to show you how to do this and there are some caveats with this and I'll show you what it does so I'm going to go up here on back in into my main menu here and I'm going to move over and there is an option see it's grayed out on my camera right now and I'll tell you why it says dual video record now if you turn that on what it's going to do is record two videos it's going to record your main video that you're filming in full 1080P or whatever setting you've got and it's also going to do just a little mp4 file that is sized at 720p and it's got some heavy compression on it but it does create a video the transfers pretty much just as fast as the image was on there and you can do it now the reason mine is grayed out is it does have you know some rules here and part of it has to do with the speed of the camera processor and mine if you try and select it it will tell you why and it says because I've got steady shots set to intelligent active and I think it's because the processing power to do a lot of the steady cam stuff uh it's just too much so it won't try to do it it'll overheat if it does and so what the work around to do that is just go in and change your steady shot settings so if you're handholding video you can just use the regular standard setting I believe you can use active but you can't use intelligent active but that's how you set that up uh you can turn it off completely if you're using a tripod but that allows you and I've used this a couple times now and it's really nice it allows you to record a second video and use it just as a proof or whatever you want to do with it you can even record something silly and upload to Youtube the reason you would want to do this is because the image quality on the RX100 is so much better than what I can get off the phone camera I can actually get depth the field on there I can actually get nice color Renditions um just you know by Nature cell phone cameras are still cell phone cameras they're not bad they're way better than they used to be but if you want a superior image off of this camera you can do it it's really great on the Sony a7s too both video and stills the one thing that's a little disappointing in here and the play memories app is this um let me go back into that so you I can show you when I go into play memories for some reason and this is a coding issue on Sony's behalf but if I go into settings there is copy image size I have this is set to original it does not give you an original image size it gets something that is 1080 by whatever the other dimension is depending on the aspect ratio you have set up so it greatly reduces the size of the image so it's definitely not going to give you something that's going to be big enough to print very large uh it's really just going to give you a proof of something that you can use for social media or you can use just as a comp to send to a client or use for yourself one thing that is nice is actually if you are doing some extensive video on here I can move my images over there if I want to or my vide over there if I want to look at them later before I've actually moved everything over on the card it just is a really nice proofing device uh like I said it's not perfect but you know it does allow you to integrate with your cell phone I did not put this into my review when I talked about the RX100 last time because I actually hadn't used it yet um when I tried this on the Sony nx5 a long time ago it was so clunky and clui and weird and I could never get it to work right and Sony had this bizarre App Store and you had to deal with that and anyway they still have the bizarre App Store but the the the flow is really seamless on here and I like it that simple I don't want it going into an app or doing something weird I like the way that play memories just moves it over and puts it onto your camera roll I wish they would figure out that bug and maybe it's something I'm doing wrong but I cannot get it to transfer the original size uh which is a little bit unfortunate because sometimes it does paint you into a corner with what you can do but the size it gives you at 1080 by whatever it's 1080 pixels 1080 um it's it's big enough to deal with for most internet applications it's just not going to be very high quality so that is how you set up Wi-Fi on the Sony system I want to take a second and give a shout out to our sponsor today who are the awesome folks over at linda.com if you're not familiar with linda.com they offer one of the most comprehensive online video training libraries that you're going to find anywhere and they've got topics in here covering everything from graphic design to photography to video work to software to Concepts to you can even learn how to code in here it really is an amazing amazing collection of tutorials and uh one of the ones I'm working on right now and I've been a member of linda.com for years even long since before they were a sponsor and I really love Linda and this is one of the things I love most about it is I'm kind of going back to basics on the software training and as many people know there are new versions of Lightroom that have hit and uh I need to know what's new about it so that I can talk about it on the show and teach and work and all the stuff that I do with Lightroom and they have a wonderful course telling you all the stuff so this is online uh Lightroom CC training 2015 and some of these are at a beginner level but what's cool about Linda is if you already have a grasp on basic concepts and you're not new to Lightroom is you can kind of skip around they kind of separate these out into separate chapter tutorials so if there's something new you want to learn about you can simply go in and click it and uh you know get up on your training with it and so Linda has always worked really well for that uh if you're looking at brushing up your skills on something or a new version of software comes out this is a great place to go in and fill in gaps in your knowledge if you want to try linda.com they have a deal right now for Art of Photography viewers where you can get this for 10 days that's complete unlimited access of everything on the website so you can go in and get caught up on Lightroom definitely in your 10day trial uh and maybe learn something else while you're in here too and so what you want to do to take advantage of that is you need to go to a special link and that link is linda.com aop that is Linda with a y.com aop that'll give you 10 days unlimited access to the entire website and I want to give a special shout out and thanks to the folks at linda.com for once again sponsoring another episode of The Art of Photography I hope you guys have found this useful and obviously I'm speaking to the Sony cameras in this video and the stuff that I own there are other camera manufacturers that either have already Incorporated Wi-Fi into their camera models or will be doing so in the near future obviously it's not a completely Flawless setup it's not the perfect solution um obviously you can't bring over raw images in fact the size on images and video are both reduced however it is interesting because it is pretty seamless and smooth now where it didn't used to be and there's a lot you can do with that if you have images that you want to share with a client or somebody via Dropbox or anything that you can do on a mobile device uh social media things of that nature I think this is a really good solution and actually really cool when you're out and about or even on vacation if you just want to share some images to do a lot of times when I've done jobs um either photography and or video um even with takes it's nice to have that dual record mode set so you can get at least a 720p U video out of the thing that you can look at for reference uh it does not replace the actual file that you're using and like I said there are restrictions on it you know it's interesting to see where this is all going because um and I know I'm not alone in this opinion I have some friends I've talked to about this but really what I want to see one day happen is that this is the camera and this does all the image taking and my cell phone would actually be capable of handling the images doing sorting proofing processing I we're a ways away from that you know at this point a lot of mobile phones well just about all mobile phones nothing handles camera raw for instance uh you know the Wi-Fi capabilities that having that just kind of run in the background and not eat batteries all the time that's another issue so we're still a little ways away from that but it really is interesting to me because if you look at what each company that's manufacturing something is doing really well so for instance in Sony's case or whatever camera you like to use Nikon Canon Fuji you name it um those companies are really good at making cameras they're excellent making cameras every one of these absolutely sucks at making user interfaces they're not that kind of a company uh Sony makes a lot of things but their camera division does not excel in that nor does Nikon nor does Canon Etc and you know it's really interesting because I think that's been the Achilles heel of a lot of mobile photography too is that you're limited basically because the physical dimensions of the camera lens because it's so tiny so to be able to one day see it to where they very seamlessly integrate this does nothing but take images and video and the cell phone does nothing but process and let you move that over to a proper computer later or something like that I think that is really the ultimate situation I mean Apple uh Android they all have these wonderful touchscreen interfaces they do that well they're consumer electronics companies they've been in the computer business a long time they have the R&D money to throw at it and they really make excellent products these camera companies you know these interfaces are really kind of a joke sometimes even from Sony camera to Sony camera there little differences something's been moved around I think something's in menu 4 of the you know whatever and it's not so there is some problems with that and I just hope one day they could find a solution to where they have some kind of technology that turns that over and just lets you do that on a device that's already well suited for that but anyway I do want to share that today because I think Wi-Fi right now is actually something that's very useful I've been using it a lot lately and it's actually very cool for proofing social media sharing quick emails to people um you're definitely not replacing the perfect solution with processing raw images or anything like that you're still going to need a computer but for what it does I think it does it really well anyway as always guys if you enjoyed this video remember to hit the like button and share it with your friends and as always subs subscribe so you'll be up to date on all the latest and greatest videos that we produce here at the Art of Photography and that's about all I got for today until the next video I'll see you then laterwhat's up everybody Ted Forbes here welcome back to the Art of Photography I want to talk a little bit about the Wi-Fi capabilities today on the Sony RX100 Mark III this is a camera that I bought a couple months back I've absolutely fallen in love with this thing it is pocket sized it's amazing you can do all sorts of cool things with this and I did a pretty extensive review on this a couple episodes ago and I'll link to that in the show notes and at the end of the video if you're interested in watching that one thing I did not touch on very much in this review were the Wi-Fi capabilities of this camera and the reason I didn't talk about them very much is some of the previous Sony that I owned like the nx5 and such they had Wi-Fi capabilities but they were pretty bad and so I really kind of gave up on that as being anything useful and so when I picked up the ARX 100 Mark III kind of glossed it over and reviewed it as a camera and so that's what I've talked about before I've since gotten into this and tried it and it's really pretty cool and surprisingly very useful so come on over and I want to go up close with the Sony RX100 Mark II and check out how to use Wi-Fi with this so let's talk about about the Wi-Fi capabilities in the Sony and I will note that this works what I'm showing you here works pretty much across all the Sony's that I've got so the RX100 Mark II it works fine on the a7s I've had no trouble with a5100 I don't own an a6000 but I'm sure it works on that somebody might be able to chime in on the comments on that but I want to show you how this works and what's really cool is this is not well it's not going to replace your workflow with Lightroom and raw images and storage and all that um but what it does do is if you have images on your camera that you want to show a proof to a client uh you just want to have to check out on the smartphone really easily um you want to upload something via Dropbox maybe you want to share an image on social media this is an excellent way to get that going on and so what we're going to do is there's a setting I'm going to show you inside the camera that turns the camera into a Wi-Fi hotspot and all we do is we connect the phone there is a app that you need on here it is the Sony play memories app and it is available for Android and iOS definitely uh and it works pretty well so the first thing we're going to do is let's turn on the camera and I'm going to go into my menu settings here and under the Wi-Fi icon up here my first one is send a smartphone so what I'm going to do is I'm going to go ahead and select that then you get two options select on this device or select on the smartphone I actually like to do it from the smartphone so I'm going to select the second option so select from smartphone or on smartphone and I'm going to go ahead and Sue this it's going to Wi-Fi standby and then what it does is it creates a hot spot and this is the address you're going to look for and here's your password now I have connected to this before so it will remember my password I won't have to type that in uh but what I'm going to do is go ahead on my iPhone into the settings menu here I'm going to go under Wi-Fi and I'm going to whoops I'm going to select that direct-care and I am connected so I have connected to the camera via Wi-Fi I'm going to open the Sony play memories app and what it's going to do is it's there it is and here's some goofy photos of my cat Judy eating a cracker and so I want to bring one of those over to my smartphone what I do is I can select the entire date and it will select all the images or I can just select one whatever I want to do I can say copy and it's going to copy the image boom done items copied you can copy as many images as you want now what that does is that it actually is going to go in here and it's going to put that image onto your camera roll is the last image being taken so there we go Judy eating a cracker and so I am able to all of a sudden view my images on my smartphone and I can do whatever I want cuz it put that on the camera rule so if I want upload that to Instagram if I want to put it on Facebook if I want to upload to Dropbox and just get a little proof copy somewhere I'm able to do all that so very cool stuff I'm going to go ahead and disconnect and I want to talk a little more about it because I'm going and cancel out of that there's a couple other options that you have and there's also some stuff that is a little disappointing about the app the other thing is you can transfer video as well and I'm going to show you how to do this and there are some caveats with this and I'll show you what it does so I'm going to go up here on back in into my main menu here and I'm going to move over and there is an option see it's grayed out on my camera right now and I'll tell you why it says dual video record now if you turn that on what it's going to do is record two videos it's going to record your main video that you're filming in full 1080P or whatever setting you've got and it's also going to do just a little mp4 file that is sized at 720p and it's got some heavy compression on it but it does create a video the transfers pretty much just as fast as the image was on there and you can do it now the reason mine is grayed out is it does have you know some rules here and part of it has to do with the speed of the camera processor and mine if you try and select it it will tell you why and it says because I've got steady shots set to intelligent active and I think it's because the processing power to do a lot of the steady cam stuff uh it's just too much so it won't try to do it it'll overheat if it does and so what the work around to do that is just go in and change your steady shot settings so if you're handholding video you can just use the regular standard setting I believe you can use active but you can't use intelligent active but that's how you set that up uh you can turn it off completely if you're using a tripod but that allows you and I've used this a couple times now and it's really nice it allows you to record a second video and use it just as a proof or whatever you want to do with it you can even record something silly and upload to Youtube the reason you would want to do this is because the image quality on the RX100 is so much better than what I can get off the phone camera I can actually get depth the field on there I can actually get nice color Renditions um just you know by Nature cell phone cameras are still cell phone cameras they're not bad they're way better than they used to be but if you want a superior image off of this camera you can do it it's really great on the Sony a7s too both video and stills the one thing that's a little disappointing in here and the play memories app is this um let me go back into that so you I can show you when I go into play memories for some reason and this is a coding issue on Sony's behalf but if I go into settings there is copy image size I have this is set to original it does not give you an original image size it gets something that is 1080 by whatever the other dimension is depending on the aspect ratio you have set up so it greatly reduces the size of the image so it's definitely not going to give you something that's going to be big enough to print very large uh it's really just going to give you a proof of something that you can use for social media or you can use just as a comp to send to a client or use for yourself one thing that is nice is actually if you are doing some extensive video on here I can move my images over there if I want to or my vide over there if I want to look at them later before I've actually moved everything over on the card it just is a really nice proofing device uh like I said it's not perfect but you know it does allow you to integrate with your cell phone I did not put this into my review when I talked about the RX100 last time because I actually hadn't used it yet um when I tried this on the Sony nx5 a long time ago it was so clunky and clui and weird and I could never get it to work right and Sony had this bizarre App Store and you had to deal with that and anyway they still have the bizarre App Store but the the the flow is really seamless on here and I like it that simple I don't want it going into an app or doing something weird I like the way that play memories just moves it over and puts it onto your camera roll I wish they would figure out that bug and maybe it's something I'm doing wrong but I cannot get it to transfer the original size uh which is a little bit unfortunate because sometimes it does paint you into a corner with what you can do but the size it gives you at 1080 by whatever it's 1080 pixels 1080 um it's it's big enough to deal with for most internet applications it's just not going to be very high quality so that is how you set up Wi-Fi on the Sony system I want to take a second and give a shout out to our sponsor today who are the awesome folks over at linda.com if you're not familiar with linda.com they offer one of the most comprehensive online video training libraries that you're going to find anywhere and they've got topics in here covering everything from graphic design to photography to video work to software to Concepts to you can even learn how to code in here it really is an amazing amazing collection of tutorials and uh one of the ones I'm working on right now and I've been a member of linda.com for years even long since before they were a sponsor and I really love Linda and this is one of the things I love most about it is I'm kind of going back to basics on the software training and as many people know there are new versions of Lightroom that have hit and uh I need to know what's new about it so that I can talk about it on the show and teach and work and all the stuff that I do with Lightroom and they have a wonderful course telling you all the stuff so this is online uh Lightroom CC training 2015 and some of these are at a beginner level but what's cool about Linda is if you already have a grasp on basic concepts and you're not new to Lightroom is you can kind of skip around they kind of separate these out into separate chapter tutorials so if there's something new you want to learn about you can simply go in and click it and uh you know get up on your training with it and so Linda has always worked really well for that uh if you're looking at brushing up your skills on something or a new version of software comes out this is a great place to go in and fill in gaps in your knowledge if you want to try linda.com they have a deal right now for Art of Photography viewers where you can get this for 10 days that's complete unlimited access of everything on the website so you can go in and get caught up on Lightroom definitely in your 10day trial uh and maybe learn something else while you're in here too and so what you want to do to take advantage of that is you need to go to a special link and that link is linda.com aop that is Linda with a y.com aop that'll give you 10 days unlimited access to the entire website and I want to give a special shout out and thanks to the folks at linda.com for once again sponsoring another episode of The Art of Photography I hope you guys have found this useful and obviously I'm speaking to the Sony cameras in this video and the stuff that I own there are other camera manufacturers that either have already Incorporated Wi-Fi into their camera models or will be doing so in the near future obviously it's not a completely Flawless setup it's not the perfect solution um obviously you can't bring over raw images in fact the size on images and video are both reduced however it is interesting because it is pretty seamless and smooth now where it didn't used to be and there's a lot you can do with that if you have images that you want to share with a client or somebody via Dropbox or anything that you can do on a mobile device uh social media things of that nature I think this is a really good solution and actually really cool when you're out and about or even on vacation if you just want to share some images to do a lot of times when I've done jobs um either photography and or video um even with takes it's nice to have that dual record mode set so you can get at least a 720p U video out of the thing that you can look at for reference uh it does not replace the actual file that you're using and like I said there are restrictions on it you know it's interesting to see where this is all going because um and I know I'm not alone in this opinion I have some friends I've talked to about this but really what I want to see one day happen is that this is the camera and this does all the image taking and my cell phone would actually be capable of handling the images doing sorting proofing processing I we're a ways away from that you know at this point a lot of mobile phones well just about all mobile phones nothing handles camera raw for instance uh you know the Wi-Fi capabilities that having that just kind of run in the background and not eat batteries all the time that's another issue so we're still a little ways away from that but it really is interesting to me because if you look at what each company that's manufacturing something is doing really well so for instance in Sony's case or whatever camera you like to use Nikon Canon Fuji you name it um those companies are really good at making cameras they're excellent making cameras every one of these absolutely sucks at making user interfaces they're not that kind of a company uh Sony makes a lot of things but their camera division does not excel in that nor does Nikon nor does Canon Etc and you know it's really interesting because I think that's been the Achilles heel of a lot of mobile photography too is that you're limited basically because the physical dimensions of the camera lens because it's so tiny so to be able to one day see it to where they very seamlessly integrate this does nothing but take images and video and the cell phone does nothing but process and let you move that over to a proper computer later or something like that I think that is really the ultimate situation I mean Apple uh Android they all have these wonderful touchscreen interfaces they do that well they're consumer electronics companies they've been in the computer business a long time they have the R&D money to throw at it and they really make excellent products these camera companies you know these interfaces are really kind of a joke sometimes even from Sony camera to Sony camera there little differences something's been moved around I think something's in menu 4 of the you know whatever and it's not so there is some problems with that and I just hope one day they could find a solution to where they have some kind of technology that turns that over and just lets you do that on a device that's already well suited for that but anyway I do want to share that today because I think Wi-Fi right now is actually something that's very useful I've been using it a lot lately and it's actually very cool for proofing social media sharing quick emails to people um you're definitely not replacing the perfect solution with processing raw images or anything like that you're still going to need a computer but for what it does I think it does it really well anyway as always guys if you enjoyed this video remember to hit the like button and share it with your friends and as always subs subscribe so you'll be up to date on all the latest and greatest videos that we produce here at the Art of Photography and that's about all I got for today until the next video I'll see you then later\n"