This entry was posted on Friday, February 17th, 2012 at 1:02 pm and is filed under Photo Tips.
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Great video, iv just got my self a nex-7 im new to photography i went for the nex-7 due to me doing a lot of travelling and it being small. but if you could help me out, is there any light room other then Adobe for free just why im getting into it? or cheaper?
I always wonder how to measure the best distance for depth of field. I mean, if you shoot f8 or f11 you will get nice depth of field when shooting landscape and you will get everything from front to end in focus. But how would u decide that for f11 is the best to shoot how much further scene. let’s say for the same scene f5.6 would not give you that long DOF. so plz explain the relationship between distance and F stop number to get the best dof and even the farthest subject to be in focus.
why F22? To compensate with the 2 seconds? If you shoot at F22, you will lose alot of detail. Better use ND Filters (4/6/8) to get the 2 seconds exposure and shoot at F8-F11 max. More detail, image more sharper and less distortion from the lens.
people just love to bash processing, but to me you took a so so picture and turned it into something worth looking at, what you did with it in my opinion is better looking than how it actually looked, so I would say overall, nicely done ( whats the camera and lens you used ) and whats the video and audio set up ?
For those of you bashing processing your pics: old-school film photographers do the same thing with filters and development techniques. The processing isn’t the problem, it is learning to not cross the fine line that is overprocessing.
lame
“We have those clouds….in the sky” really I though they were on the ground
Thanks for the tips.
clouds…….in the sky.
yo i think the best it’s take the picture whit out the lightroom think about this when you goma make another video
zoom h1 in hand : D
Wow! I love the ideas. Thank you for the tips!
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Great video, iv just got my self a nex-7 im new to photography i went for the nex-7 due to me doing a lot of travelling and it being small. but if you could help me out, is there any light room other then Adobe for free just why im getting into it? or cheaper?
all I learnt here is that computers are as Homer says: a magical box.
in the olden days, before photoshop & digital cameras, we did all are “over-processing” in the Dark-Room. ;p
unless over-processing is what the photographer is looking for in hisher photo 😉
You should study what true photography is then, if that’s really how you feel.
That was outstanding . Cheers!!!
I have to agree with you in this statement.
I always wonder how to measure the best distance for depth of field. I mean, if you shoot f8 or f11 you will get nice depth of field when shooting landscape and you will get everything from front to end in focus. But how would u decide that for f11 is the best to shoot how much further scene. let’s say for the same scene f5.6 would not give you that long DOF. so plz explain the relationship between distance and F stop number to get the best dof and even the farthest subject to be in focus.
come by my channel for tips and tricks thanks steve please subscribe for more videos
why F22? To compensate with the 2 seconds? If you shoot at F22, you will lose alot of detail. Better use ND Filters (4/6/8) to get the 2 seconds exposure and shoot at F8-F11 max. More detail, image more sharper and less distortion from the lens.
unless you shoot .jpeg
no professional photographer doesnt post process their images. as the other guy said. get with the program. get your head out of your ass.
Perfect shot 1:28 ?
You’re an idiot. Get with the times.
How about a free screen recording program?
people just love to bash processing, but to me you took a so so picture and turned it into something worth looking at, what you did with it in my opinion is better looking than how it actually looked, so I would say overall, nicely done ( whats the camera and lens you used ) and whats the video and audio set up ?
For those of you bashing processing your pics: old-school film photographers do the same thing with filters and development techniques. The processing isn’t the problem, it is learning to not cross the fine line that is overprocessing.