I love those two shots. Very warm in look and mood, I feel like I'm actually in the room while looking at them.
I took a number of photo classes while in grade school (many years ago) and through high school just shot casually. In University I did a few more photo classes as part of my Art & Art History major. Photography and sculpture have always been my favorites.
I've got (at least what I used to consider) a really good book called Photography, by Barberra & John Upton (as far as I recall), but I've already started making a small list of some new titles I want to get, including
Light - Science and Magic which looks like a fantastic "text" for al things lighting. And if photography is anything, it's about capturing the light.
Here are my other purchases to be phased in over the next few of months:
Induro CX-113 tripod legs (picking up on Sunday actually)
Really Right Stuff BH-40 ballhead, QR lever clamp, QR L plate
Gorillapod SLR Zoom and regular Zoom models (the regular one will primarily be used for supporting the flash off-camera in the field)
Nikon SB-600 speedlight
Lumiquest 80-20 bounce card with inserts and diffuser
Sigma 30mm f/1.4
Sigma 10-20 f/4-5.6
ND filters 2 and 3 stop
Nikon Circular Polarizer
Some B+W step up rings (everything is going up to 77mm)
Nodal Ninja 5 pano bracket
The above stuff before mid-April 2008, the stuff below can come after
A Macro lens I haven't decided on yet
Nikon R1 macro lighting kit (the little flashes can be controlled off camera wirelessly
Haven't decided if I get the below before or after April
Cokin P filter holder (I'll take the front two slots off to eliminate vignetting at wide angles)
A couple of Singh Ray graduated ND filters to fit the Cokin.
Because of the smaller DX sensor (1.5x/crop), I've decided on the Sigma 30mm as my "natural" prime. It was a choice between it and the Nikkor 35mm F2. I did in fact want to start with the prime, but I was able to get a slight discount on the Nikkor 18-200 by purchasing it now. I love shooting with small and fast lenses, which is why the 50mm I had for the Minolta was my favorite.
I consider myself above average with Photoshop, but I have never established any kind of workflow for photography, let alone ever worked with RAW images. I picked up Lightroom in the summer which has been great for managing collections, and making adjustments and exports here and there. I haven't begun to tap its abilities yet though (I hope Adobe doesn't screw this program up).
I've been reading Ken Rockwell's site for at least 5 or 6 years, however very irregularly. I take his writing style and sometimes over the top assertions in stride, and still get bothered when some others can't do anything but put him down. Classic jealousy IMO. I understand where he's coming from and I appreciate all the effort that goes into maintaining his site. His ideas and opinions seem to be heavily geared toward opening up photography to everyone, so in that vein he's sort of the anti-elitist which is part of what bothers a lot of people.
You don't need an SLR or good lenses to make great pictures nor to enjoy yourself making them. For me however, the look, feel and control afforded by an SLR do go a long way to making the process a lot more manageable and enjoyable. I always felt severely restricted and encumbered by the E5700, even though I have quite a number of great looking images made with it.
I've got to get a handle on all the basic settings and initial setup of this camera before I'll feel completely at ease with it and can start concentrating again on the art.