Choose your camera carefully.
If it's important to you to share your pictures with friends and family, make sure you bring a digital camera along, so that you can download your images onto your computer, and then e-mail them around or upload them onto a photo-sharing website such as kodakgallery.com, flickr.com, snapfish.com or smugmug. com. Digital cameras are also desirable because they don't require film, which means you can shoot to your heart's content. 'The immediacy of a digital camera is its strength. you can make sure that you've got the perfect shot before you leave a site,' explains Mark Konezny, a spokesman for Kodak.
Practice makes perfect.
Don't try out a new camera, such as one you received as a wedding present, for the first time on your honeymoon. 'Use your camera for several weeks before your trip so that you can get used to how it works,' says professional travel photographer Jonathan Atkin. 'You don't want to spend your trip reading a manual.'
Plan your photo ops.
Just as you wouldn't want to go to the top of Paris' Eiffel Tower, New York's Empire State Building or Hawai'i's Mount Halea-kala on a rainy day, you also wouldn't want to take pictures of the view from there in bad weather. Instead of sticking to a predetermined schedule, save these trip highlights. which also make key photo ops. for a day when you're blessed with great conditions. This way, you're more likely to get an image that you can frame.
Time your visits.
The...
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