photography-module-1-getting-started

ITIAN Photography Academy
Technology Simplified — Solutions That Work
Getting Started: Know and Prepare Your Camera
Begin with the equipment you already have. Learn what type of camera you are using, prepare it safely, locate its essential controls and create baseline photographs that will show your progress.
Module Purpose
Photography becomes easier when your equipment is familiar, ready and organised. This module removes uncertainty before exposure, focus and composition become more demanding.
Understand your camera
Identify the strengths, limitations and main controls of a smartphone, compact, mirrorless or DSLR camera.
Prepare it correctly
Check power, storage, lens condition, image settings, date, time and the safe handling needed before practice.
Build a file routine
Know where original photographs will go, how they will be named and where a separate backup copy will be kept.
Create a starting point
Make a small baseline set before formal technical training so later improvement can be recognised honestly.
Module Learning Outcomes
By the end of Module 1, you should be able to complete each outcome without relying on guesswork.
- Identify your camera type and its most useful strengths.
- Locate focus, exposure, shutter and image-review controls.
- Prepare battery, storage, lens and basic image settings.
- Handle and clean your equipment without creating damage.
- Create a clear folder and backup plan for original photographs.
- Produce and review a five-image baseline set.
Module 1 Lesson Sequence
Complete both lessons in order, then finish the five-frame baseline challenge.
Camera Types and Choices
Understand how smartphones, compact cameras, mirrorless cameras and DSLRs differ without treating one type as automatically superior.
- Sensor and lens basics
- Convenience versus control
- Strengths and limitations
- Choosing for the photograph
Camera Setup, Care and Essential Controls
Prepare your equipment, locate core controls, set up storage and handle the camera reliably before fieldwork.
- Battery and storage
- Lens cleaning and handling
- Focus, exposure and review controls
- File and backup preparation
What You Need
Use what you already own. Only the camera or smartphone is essential.
| Item | Status | Purpose | Practical advice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camera or smartphone | Essential | Creates all Module 1 activity images. | Charge it and confirm available storage before beginning. |
| Charging equipment | Essential | Keeps the device available for practice. | Use a safe compatible charger and inspect damaged cables. |
| Microfibre lens cloth | Recommended | Removes fingerprints and light surface dust. | Never use abrasive household tissues or cleaning products. |
| Notebook or notes app | Recommended | Records controls, questions and baseline observations. | Date every entry and include the lesson number. |
| Computer or tablet | Optional | Supports transfer, review, folders and backup. | A phone-only start remains acceptable. |
| Extra accessories | Not required | May solve specific future limitations. | Do not buy accessories before identifying a genuine need. |
Interactive Module 1 Readiness Planner
Select your equipment and current situation. The planner will create a safe first-session checklist.
Module Challenge: Five-Frame Baseline
Create evidence of your starting point before learning formal exposure and focus techniques.
Do not perfect these photographs
The baseline exists to show your current habits. Heavy editing or repeated attempts would make later comparison less useful.
Save as
Module-01-Baseline inside your Selected Photos folder.
Future visual resources
- Camera-type comparison
- Safe lens-cleaning demonstration
- Battery and storage preparation
- Essential control locations
- Five-frame baseline example
The written module remains complete when video is unavailable.
Module 1 Readiness Checklist
Use this checklist before opening Lesson 1.1.
Next: Lesson 1.1 — Camera Types and Choices
Learn how different camera systems affect convenience, control, image quality and the kinds of photographs you can make.