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<title>Shuttermag: The Photographer's Gathering Spot</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com</link> 
<description>Keep up to date on all the latest tricks, new products, news that every digital photographer needs to know about.</description> 
<language>en</language> 


<item>
<title>Take Better Pictures</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com/howto/take_better_pictures.php</link> 
<description>Learn how to create beautiful and interesting photos-and avoid common photo mistakes.
</description>
<dc:creator>ShutterMag.com</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2004-11-29</dc:date>    
</item>
<item>
<title>Understanding Resolution</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com/howto/understanding_resolution.php</link> 
<description>The key to editing, scanning, and printing images lies in understanding how pixels transform into inches and vice versa.
</description>
<dc:creator>ShutterMag.com</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2004-11-29</dc:date>    
</item>
<item>
<title>Creating Digital Images</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com/howto/creating_digi_images.php</link> 
<description>Follow the tenets of good composition for any image you are putting on a web page. If anything, this is even more important for web page images as visitors may be scrutinizing them in more detail as the images download.
</description>
<dc:creator>ShutterMag.com</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2004-11-29</dc:date>    
</item>
<item>
<title>About Compression</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com/howto/compression.php</link> 
<description>When you shoot a digital image, it must be saved in a digital file format, and your choice (or lack thereof) of that file format helps to determine the amount of compression that is applied to the image. What compression does, as its name implies, is to compress the data inside of the image so that its file size is smaller and thus takes up less disk space. Compression, when used correctly, is an extremely beneficial tool.
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<dc:creator>ShutterMag.com</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2004-11-29</dc:date>    
</item>
<item>
<title>How Shutter Speed Work</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com/howto/shutter_speed.php</link> 
<description>Traditionally, the shutter speed is the amount of time that light is allowed to pass through the aperture. Think of a mechanical shutter as a window shade. It is placed across the back of the aperture to block out the light. Then, for a fixed amount of time, it opens and closes.
</description>
<dc:creator>ShutterMag.com</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2004-11-29</dc:date>    
</item>
<item>
<title>Controlling Light</title> 
<link>http://www.shuttermag.com/howto/controlling_light.php</link> 
<description>It is important to control the amount of light that reaches the sensor. Thinking back to the water bucket analogy, if too much light hits the sensor, the bucket will fill up and won't be able to hold any more.
</description>
<dc:creator>ShutterMag.com</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2004-11-29</dc:date>    
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