the_log_ride
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Nice thread. Subbed.
Is there any scenario where an older film SLR could be better than a recent DSLR?
If you shoot in the cold for extended period of time (say hiking for a week) then you may not have enough battery to run it.
A good film SLR doesn't need battery to operate.
(Does this belonged to the other thread?)
On the flip Film SLRs, the better ones, really lend themselves to the manual focusing experience. So in this regard they could still be considered better than the modern digital SLR.
I'm the same, always used fast primes and only occasionally use a basic bounce flash when I run out of light. Would love to know how to shoot with flash properly.
while this is true, DSLRs use very little battery when not shooting, using a live view or the lcd.
If that's important to you, get a focusing screen for your DSLR, they exist. Despite using manual focus a lot, I'm content to stick it out without one.
Also, the noise from a digital camera's sensor is reduced the colder it is, so enjoy that if you're shooting in the cold with a DSLR.
Interesting! Do you have any more info or know where I can find examples?
It depends on what kind of noise you're talking about. There are some heat patterns that appear when the sensor is stressed, but that's different from ISO noise.Interesting! Do you have any more info or know where I can find examples?
It depends on what kind of noise you're talking about. There are some heat patterns that appear when the sensor is stressed, but that's different from ISO noise.
Heat patterns usually manifest in a grid-like pattern, and some cameras have particular hot spots. You can tell them apart from random ISO noise after a few examples.yeah ive seen the modifications available to allow the camera to perform well over a long period of time, like a overnight long exposure timelapse. These can make the sensor hot.
You would need a FF body and pentaprism to get close to film SLR's MF experience.
Figured I'd put this in here rather than in the gear thread, feel free to yell if it's more appropriate elsewhere. I've generally been spending my time with my D90 since getting it taking available light photos of friends at events and other such things - even though I had a SB-600 speedlight it went fairly unused.
Now, though, I'm interested in learning how to better control added light rather than just working with what's there, which is taking me into some new things. First is trying some light tent work, since a friend of mine wants me to do some product photos for her for her side company. Second is doing some portraiture making some fairly moody light, again for the friend of mine.
So for the first task I built a light tent and did some experimenting with it tonight. The tent is about 24 inches wide by 16 inches deep by 30 inches high - sized to accomodate the largest product my friend needs photographed. Unfortunately, I haven't bought any new lamps, so the only ones I had available were a bit too low power for the size of the tent and diffusion created by the muslin over the frame - I used these lower wattage lamps on the sides and held my speedlight over the top of the tent to get the top lighting. The best results below:
Tifa is flatter and more "marketable" perhaps on ebay, but Baret came out more interesting imo (sorry he's so dirty, I didn't even realize it until I was processing the photos). Both required some processing in Lightroom to "white out" the background properly. Even with fairly long exposures (though still under a second) the low-power lamps I had available just couldn't drench the backdrop in light due to the size of the tent. So, my first order of business is to get some shop lamps that support much brighter bulbs, and I'll probably end up just doing all of the light tent work with static lighting rather than using the speedlight. I think it's just easier for this application.
Now I get to enter the world of TTL or manual speelights which are a bit confusing (not so much the concept of either, but rather just learning the controls between the camera and the off-camera flash). Here's to hoping. I'll probably try some experimental self-portraiture to test off-camera flash work before doing the photos for my friend.
I'm sure people will be smug fucks about it but there's nothing wrong with editing things in Photoshop.What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
There is no such thing as 'reality' when it comes to making photos.
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing?
Using JPEGs from your camera is like having your film developed by the grocery store.
Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
how do you like it? I'm thinking of getting one for the times I don't/can't carry around my a65
How do you like it? I'm thinking of getting it.
What are your thoughts on digital photo editing? Is it "cheating"? Something necessary?
What I'm going to try for is to reshape the OP to cover the real basics - in terms of camera selection, exposure triangle, composition, shooting skills, post-processing and what to do if stuff goes wrong - accompanied by links to whatever books/online stuff seems appropriate without being too scary. Like I said it will take a while.
What would be really nice is if a few of us could come up with stories of how we started, what it felt like, what we had to learn - more than anything else that';s the sort of thing that is handy for newcomers.
Post 'em and I'll get them linked up in the OP somewhere.
When I was doing my Euro travelogue, some people were disappointed upon learning that I touched the photos in post at all, because that meant the photos were "no longer real."
Had a good laugh at that. All eyes, digital or biological, are subjective interpreters of reality. And a camera spitting out a jpg is doing a full set of post work on the spot, it's just automated based on the camera's internal parameters, so you may as well be doing it yourself if you want to be more in control of the end result.
If we accept that photography is art, which should be obvious enough, then the photographer manipulating the result at any point in the process is part of that art.
Oh my goodness. I had forgotten how gigantic the Camera Equipment thread is!
There's some good beginner tips in there, mostly down to rentahamster (for example at #264, #722-#761 and around the #1600 mark) which I pulling out to slot in here, but I'm only about a tenth the way thought so far. Hang in there folks!
When I was doing my Euro travelogue, some people were disappointed upon learning that I touched the photos in post at all, because that meant the photos were "no longer real."
Had a good laugh at that. All eyes, digital or biological, are subjective interpreters of reality. And a camera spitting out a jpg is doing a full set of post work on the spot, it's just automated based on the camera's internal parameters, so you may as well be doing it yourself if you want to be more in control of the end result.
If we accept that photography is art, which should be obvious enough, then the photographer manipulating the result at any point in the process is part of that art.
Here is my deal. I have mastered my camera. I understand all of its settings. I know what my lenses are capable of and when to use them. What I am sorely lacking is a compositional eye. I actually have the book from earlier in the thread about composition (The Photographer's Eye), and I find it helpful. But I would like more. I've started to see things in everyday life in the framing of a photograph and can even recognize a good shot occasionally. But when all is said and done, I am rarely happy with the results. I look at shots taken by my peers and they exhibit an effortless grasp of composition. I guess what I need is advice on finding a place for constructive criticism, composition advice, art snobbery, that sort of thing.
Subbed thread, thanks OP.
Red wine and whiskey, you say?
Here is my deal. I have mastered my camera. I understand all of its settings. I know what my lenses are capable of and when to use them. What I am sorely lacking is a compositional eye. I actually have the book from earlier in the thread about composition (The Photographer's Eye), and I find it helpful. But I would like more. I've started to see things in everyday life in the framing of a photograph and can even recognize a good shot occasionally. But when all is said and done, I am rarely happy with the results. I look at shots taken by my peers and they exhibit an effortless grasp of composition. I guess what I need is advice on finding a place for constructive criticism, composition advice, art snobbery, that sort of thing.
Subbed thread, thanks OP.
I'm exactly in the same situation and found help in a local photo enthusiast group. We go out and shoot, the older dudes give their recommendations and later we discuss the results (lighting, exposure and composition) while drinking red wine and whiskey. I prefer this concept to an online community because you get to know your critics personally which make their verdicts more human compared to the opinion of some anon avatars.
Here is my deal. I have mastered my camera. I understand all of its settings. I know what my lenses are capable of and when to use them. What I am sorely lacking is a compositional eye. I actually have the book from earlier in the thread about composition (The Photographer's Eye), and I find it helpful. But I would like more. I've started to see things in everyday life in the framing of a photograph and can even recognize a good shot occasionally. But when all is said and done, I am rarely happy with the results. I look at shots taken by my peers and they exhibit an effortless grasp of composition. I guess what I need is advice on finding a place for constructive criticism, composition advice, art snobbery, that sort of thing.
Subbed thread, thanks OP.
Here is my deal. I have mastered my camera. I understand all of its settings. I know what my lenses are capable of and when to use them.
What I am sorely lacking is a compositional eye.
I know about the technical stuff with the doohickeys and the shutter length area, and viewspeeds or whatever, but I suck at composition
What looks cool in real life and what looks good as a photo--they don't always overlap
And I thought I was good at simple composition when I was painting
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Well simple is fine as long as there's some imagination in the composition. Painting has its own unique character built in with the brushstrokes, colors and other little oddities that are created by the process, whereas photography has your eye + depth of field options - whatever information the camera subtracts (like dynamic range). It can make what you think is a pleasing visual situation flat, and your eye always sees everything in a much wider context. Google "portrait" and you'll see plenty of pictures that are at least competently composed and simple, but fail to grab you for more than a second. Lighting and subject expressions/poses are huge pitfalls.I know about the technical stuff with the doohickeys and the shutter length area, and viewspeeds or whatever, but I suck at composition
What looks cool in real life and what looks good as a photo--they don't always overlap
And I thought I was good at simple composition when I was painting
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