Untitled_HDR5 by adamwolach, on Flickr
2014-08-17 23.14.54-103 by adamwolach, on Flickr
2014-08-17 23.14.54-102 by adamwolach, on Flickr
Does anyone know a site where I can see photos taken with a particular camera? I want to see what more my camera can do with better hands and since it's equivalent to a RX100, I would like to search that as well
You can https://pixelpeeper.com/ (which just searches flickr for you)Does anyone know a site where I can see photos taken with a particular camera? I want to see what more my camera can do with better hands and since it's equivalent to a RX100, I would like to search that as well
Looked back at an old picture of mine and it's indeed light sources that have a triangular shapeGuess, the fact the we see only one tripped me off.
Babel
I had the idea yesterday driving home but I am not yet pleased enough by the color tones. I think I went to my building roof a bit too late.
I am not familiar with Adobe CC, but in regular lightroom, the adjustments made to photos are saved locally on the machine that made them. You have to sync the library folder to all other machines to do it.Hey y'all, I'm not sure where to ask this, so here goes.
I have Adobe CC and two PCs that I'd like to be able to edit from using Lightroom. I also have a number of VSCO packs, installed on both machines.
I'd like to "sync" EVERYTHING--that is, I could edit a photo on my Surface Pro 3 using Lightroom/VSCO, and then when I check it on my desktop, it has my adjustments/settings saved.
I have OneDrive, which lets me access the same set of photos, as they are synced across both computers...but I'm unsure how to get my actual *adjustments* to sync. Any ideas?
I am not familiar with Adobe CC, but in regular lightroom, the adjustments made to photos are saved locally on the machine that made them. You have to sync the library folder to all other machines to do it.
My guess it is probably similar in Adobe CC but I am not sure.
Thanks! Sounds like I just need to track down that folder and reassign it somewhere in my OneDrive.
Beautiful. I'd have to hike across continents for locations like that. :'(my usual hiking pics post
Beautiful. I'd have to hike across continents for locations like that. :'(
I am not familiar with Adobe CC, but in regular lightroom, the adjustments made to photos are saved locally on the machine that made them. You have to sync the library folder to all other machines to do it.
My guess it is probably similar in Adobe CC but I am not sure.
Holy crap that is stunning.
For a person that wants to get into photography, what's a great camera to get?
For a person that wants to get into photography, what's a great camera to get?
I'm using a Sony a6000 as my first. Loving it.
Here is the camera hardware thread.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=144603
That said, you really can't go wrong with any camera. What people probably need to know is, what is your budget, how serious are you looking to get, what kind of photography, does size matter to you?
For instance if size matters, any of the mirrorless options from Olympus, Panasonic, Nikon, canon etc would work well if you value taking your camera with you everywhere.
If it doesn't or if the best autofocus is a requirement you might want to look at full size DSLRs.
- Not entirely sure as of yet.
- Serious to a point of wanting to do so, and see where it goes from that.
- Things of like nature, night time shots, up close photography.
- Size definitely does not matter.
Any particular reason? :V
Thanks! I'll check that out.
For those questions:
- Not entirely sure as of yet.
- Serious to a point of wanting to do so, and see where it goes from that.
- Things of like nature, night time shots, up close photography.
- Size definitely does not matter.
For a person that wants to get into photography, what's a great camera to get?
Honestly for me the a6000 is a no-brainer for anyone seriously interested in starting to learn photography. It's compact, offers the most features for the buck and most importantly (for me at least) it allows the use of virtually any lenses through the use of an adapter.Photography-gaf,
I've been really interested in photography lately so I was thinking maybe it's time that I get a camera. I have a camcorder that I've been using for video, but now I wanna upgrade. I'm considering the Nikon D3300 for it's price tag, but the Sony A6000 looks interesting too. I'm trying to stay under $700 in terms of budget so I'm leaning more toward the Nikon. But then there is also the Canon 100D which seems to be in the same category as the D3300. What do you guys think?
Thanks for the advice. Would stock lenses be good enough to start with?Honestly for me the a6000 is a no-brainer for anyone seriously interested in starting to learn photography. It's compact, offers the most features for the buck and most importantly (for me at least) it allows the use of virtually any lenses through the use of an adapter.
I've found there's nothing better to learn photography than using old cheap manual (but still great!) lenses and force yourself to learn the basics.