Photography Workshops
Learn professional techniques and workflows for digital photography with Paul Foley.
Paul's creative and information packed workshops are designed especially for enthusiast photographers wanting to get the most from their new DSLR camera. Held in the beautiful grounds and buildings of Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens they are uniquely supported by online follow up assessment and guidance after the workshop.
Three half day workshops cover
- Portraiture
- Macro/Closeup Photography
- Finding Pictures: The Artistic Landscape.
Please book here for October and November workshops.
You can also register your interest in a full day course designed to explain RAW photography, the software to process RAW files and colour managed inkjet printmaking.
Workshops for Tourism organisations, government agencies and corporate clients.
Sometimes, it's not practical or timely to employ a professional photographer to record procedures and incidents or capture promotional and sales images. So, harnessing his 25 years of professional photographic experience, Paul has developed a series of workshops that are tailored to the specific requirements of your organisation or business. Your team will learn professional techniques and creative guidelines to greatly improve the pictures you need to make 'in house'.
Services include assessment of existing equipment and procedures, creative and technically proficient digital capture, colour management as well as storage and distribution of your digital assets. Workshops can also be supported by workbooks detailing workflows and procedures.
Regional Tourism Organisations and Councils will benefit from Paul's expertise - wherever staff undertake digital photography as part of their work. When images are required for promotional, technical or even legal reasons, the workshops will ensure better general results as well as an informed understanding of what level of photography should be undertaken and how to best brief a professional if one is required.
"Digital Photography is part of nearly every organisation. The perception that digital cameras make everything easy and automatic and that mistakes can be fixed up in the computer is a dangerous one that can often have detrimental effects on your image, branding and even legal standing."

