What to Learn After Photography

Explore the exciting world of digital photography and its various career paths including videography, video editing, and graphic design. Learn how to harness your creative potential, utilize advanced technology, and uncover a wealth of opportunities in the visual arts industry.

Key Insights

  • Digital photography offers a vast array of career paths such as videography, video editing, and graphic design.
  • Photography skills extend beyond just taking photos, with areas such as image manipulation, understanding lighting, and utilizing camera settings being essential.
  • Videography and video editing build upon photography skills, incorporating elements of time, sound, and movement.
  • Graphic design offers a platform to enhance the effect of photographic images with text, shapes, and colors.
  • Noble Desktop offers comprehensive photography training, with options for in-person and live online courses, and the opportunity to earn certificates in photo retouching or graphic design.
  • Understanding a range of visual arts skills can open up profitable opportunities, such as creating marketing designs for niche industries.

Photography is the art of producing an image by recording light with a camera. Digital cameras and editing software create lots of possibilities for the photos you’ll be able to produce if you choose to study photography. If you already know how to use photography, you might consider learning videography, video editing, or graphic design. We’ll cover these skills below so you have a clear understanding of what skill you want to tackle next.

What is Photography?

Photography is the art of producing an image by recording light with a camera. Joseph Nicéphore Niépce took the first photograph in 1826. Photography was a revolutionary technology because it made it easier for images to be reproduced and widely distributed. The first cameras were large and awkward to handle, and the lengthy exposure times necessary to capture an image required photographic subjects to hold still for uncomfortable intervals. However, as the technology evolved, cameras became easier to use and more affordable.

For over 100 years, all photographs were captured on film and developed using chemicals. In 1975, Steven Sasson invented the digital camera, which dramatically increased the ease of capturing and distributing photographic images. Most photography today is digital: the device taking the photo saves the recorded image as a digital file. Smartphones capture 92.5% of those digital photos, but there’s still nothing like a dedicated camera for getting a sharp, high-quality image. 

Digital photography classes will teach you how to make the most of your digital camera. You can learn how to use all of your camera’s settings to the best advantage, how to work with studio or outdoor lighting, and how to adapt the choices you make as a photographer to the environment and goals you are working with. You’ll also explore the powerful, industry-standard software that allows Digital Photographers to edit and retouch the photos they take. 

Read more about what photography is and why you should learn it.

What Can You Do with Photography?

Since the first photograph was taken in 1826, creators have been using this skill to capture images of the world around them. Photography allows people to document events, moments in time, and things they have seen. It can also help human beings gain a better understanding of the world, in the case of scientific photography or photojournalism. Photography is also an artistic medium—the Photographer presents their interpretation of the human experience through what they choose to document and the perspective their photos show.

Another important aspect of photography is that photographic images can be reproduced, allowing them to be circulated and distributed worldwide. Even before digital photography, a film photograph was easier to reproduce than the paintings and drawings that had previously been the best way to convey an image. One early example of how the new technology of photography rapidly came to shape the world is the work of Matthew Brady. His photos documenting the American Civil War showed the brutality of the war’s impact, powerfully influencing public opinion about the conflict.

Now, with digital cameras, the distribution of photographs can be nearly instantaneous, and reproducing one only requires uploading a file. Also, the powerful editing software available to modern Photographers makes remarkable transformations possible. Social media has shown some of what one can do with the opportunities provided by digital photography, with photos of dramatic events witnessed by private citizens being rapidly distributed all over the world. However, the full potential of digital cameras and photo editing software may have yet to reveal itself.

Videography

As a student of photography, you’ll have spent time becoming comfortable with using complex physical technology to record digital files. You’ll have mastered employing a camera’s settings to make the most of its possibilities and know how to adapt your artistic choices to lighting and other features of the environment where you are recording images. Videography uses many of the same skills, but with the added elements of time and sound. So learning videography will build on your photography skills while providing you with additional stimulating challenges.

Video Editing

As with photography and videography, photo editing and video editing have some important skills in common. If you’ve studied photo editing, you’ll know how to use software to manipulate and enhance images. Video editing also involves manipulating images. However, it also involves stitching clips together and synching sound with visuals, so you’ll have significantly more to learn if you dive into video editing. Noble Desktop has a video editing certificate that you may want to pursue after you learn photo editing.

Graphic Design

Once you’ve created and edited your photographic images, one way you can make use of them is by juxtaposing them with other elements in a graphic design format. As a student of graphic design, you’ll learn to import your images into a design file and enhance their effect with text, shapes, and colors. For example, if you like to watch ballet and have strong knowledge of both photography and graphic design, you might get a paid gig making a marketing poster based on a photograph you took of a ballerina’s dramatic pose in rehearsal. If you want to use your photographs this way, you could do Noble’s graphic design certificate program.

Key Insights

  • Some great skills to learn after photography include videography, video editing, and graphic design
  • Videography uses your comfort with handling complex physical technology and employing its settings to achieve your goals
  • Video editing also involves using software to manipulate images, but involves the added challenges of working with movement and sound
  • Graphic design will allow you to incorporate your photos into larger designs to achieve specific effects
  • You can receive comprehensive photography training through an in-person or live online course with Noble Desktop

Learn Photography with Hands-on Training at Noble Desktop

Noble Desktop’s small class sizes and expert instructors make it an excellent environment for learning photography and related skills. Students can choose between in-person and live online courses, depending on which is better for their particular situation. Students can also retake Noble classes for free, which can help expand their knowledge of the topic.

Noble offers a certificate in photo retouching specifically, delving more deeply into critical skills that Photographers should have. Another option is Noble’s popular Graphic Design Certificate, which covers Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and graphic design principles. If you don’t yet want to commit to earning a certificate, you could take an individual Photoshop course to start with. You can also do a Photoshop bootcamp for beginners with Noble.

When you do a digital photography certificate at Noble, you’ll acquire foundational skills for photography and photo editing. Students learn to use manual settings to help them make the most of what a high-quality camera offers. They also discover how to work with different types of lighting, both inside a studio and out in the world. In terms of digital photo manipulation, students explore how to manage their photographs with Adobe Lightroom and edit them using Adobe Photoshop.

How to Learn Photography & Photoshop

Master photography, photo retouching, and Photoshop with hands-on training. With tools like Photoshop and Lightroom, you can easily edit, retouch, organize, and share your photos.

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