Have you ever had the experience of a shot looking great on your camera’s LCD monitor and then looking shockingly bad when you take a look at it on your computer monitor? I certainly have. Depending on how mobile your shooting setup needs to be, tethered shooting might be a good way to make sure you get the exposure you are trying for. Tethered shooting refers to having your camera connected to your computer while you shoot. The nice thing about tethered shooting is that it allows you to see a much higher resolution and color correct (provided your monitor is calibrated) version of an image than you would ever dream of seeing on your camera’s LCD monitor. Generally what you need in order to try tethered shooting are the following: a camera and computer which can be connected (via USB, Firewire, or otherwise), a utility to import photos directly from your camera to your computer, and an image viewing application. Tethered shooting setups vary a bit depending on what equipment is being used, but the general idea is the same. In a nutshell, the big idea is to get your freshly snapped image from your camera into a watched folder on your computer and then displayed in a viewing application. In the following tutorial, I’ll demonstrate how to get set up for tethered shooting using the following equipment: a Canon Digital Rebel XTi camera, a USB cable, an Apple PowerBook G4 computer running OSX 10.4.8, Canon EOS Utility 1.1.0.8 for image import, and Adobe Lightroom 4.1 Beta for image viewing. Here’s the step-by-step. (more…)