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Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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DW |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
as ive said ive been using the s5000 for a couple fo years now and its a wicked camera so the updated models I would imagine are also wicked lol
s5600 115 quid s 5700 149 quid 2 megapixels difference and thats it mines only 3.1 but by the looks of it not a lots changed except ccd resolution |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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Does camera come with rechargable batts and charger? Regular batts won't last 5 mins. [/quote] Alkaline batteries actually last quite a while (admittedly, not as long as a rechargable), but they also have the advantage that if they die, you can usually just pop into a store and buy more. Quote:
I personally find a lot of the smaller cameras a little difficult to hold comfortably. Quote:
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Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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The Powershot range is excellent. Canon make great cameras. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
That, they do.
The IXUS is quite good as well. Not as easy to hold as the Powershot though. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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I bought one. :D QVC sold over 3000 of them in 24 hours. DW |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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What makes this camera is its DIGIC III processing which they've lifted straight from the current generation of EOS cameras its a very clever automatic system which can control everything for you if you want it (i have taken excellent pics in a dark nightclub with the normal flashing lights before, after i'd had a few drinks :-)) to but you can still burry yourself in the menus fiddling for hours! |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
I've been looking at the fuji finepix range and it's either going to be an S5600 or an S6500 I think i'll pass on the S5700, it's missing RAW mode and also a few other things the 5600 does have.
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Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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DW |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
Whilst RAW is a nice thing to have if you're planning on doing a lot of post processing, it's something that most people simply wouldn't use. Files are huge, take a lot of time to process on the computer and in most cases don't produce shots that are any better than JPEGs stored with a large fine setting.
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Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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I've still got an old Powershot A70. No good for big prints, as it's only 3MP, but still great for "normal" size prints. Ally has an IXUS 800 IS - very nice little camera. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
Barewolf
Try the library or cheapo bookstore on photography. These books can give valuable tips & advise on taking pictures. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
Well Louise gave me the camera last night and ive only had chance to play with it today. Its really nice. Good zoom for what i want. 5x Digital. Not alot but makes a big difference to my old one.
Ive set the quality to medium and its set on 5 megapixel. Can only take 15 pics with the cams memory with that, 20mb. Got a 2gb SD Card coming tomorrow so should be ok lol. My problem is even at those settings the pics on the PC come out at 1.7mb Each mostly. Thats pretty big for a Jpeg, my old ones were 600kb ish. Is this just sods law if i choose hi pixels? All camera settings are on auto at the moment, Whitebalance is on auto, Flash, ISO? That goes up to 1000 but i dont know if i manually select it or not, manuals a bit confusing as to what these things do rather it tells you how to alter it if needed. Ive taken one on this new camera of my cake Louise made for me, i really cant eat it so i keep taking pics of it instead. trouble is that its not really sharp. It has a little hand that comes up when you take a picture to tell you if the camera is shaking. No i normally have a steady hand being an artist so the camera wasnt shaking, its very hard to get rid of this icon on the LCD display when trying to take a picture. Perhaps its coz i used zoom maybe? When i can compress the images i will upload them so you can see, but there way too big at the moment. :rolleyes: Not sure, still learning. Any tips would be gratefull. About the large files. i dont know what to do to compress them and if i will loose quality, is it easier to just lower the megapixel? or compress them afterwards on pc? Which is worse for the quality of pic? |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
The size of the file depends on what level of compression the built in processor uses for the JPEGs. Not all cameras are the same.
Your ISO level is the sensitivity of the ccd to the amount of light available in the shot. The higher the ISO level, the less light you need, but bear in mind that it dramatically reduces the quality of the image due to noise and the ccd will over-pickup to compensate for lack of light. ISO levels are used in conjunction with the Aperture setting, which controls the diameter of the diaphragm when open. This also affects the Depth of Field and exposure length (shutter speed). When using a camera on manual settings, these 3 all affect each other. If you just want to point and click, use auto. The hand symbol does not always mean the camera IS shaking, it's more a warning that camera shake will affect the result. You can reduce the blur by using flash. Most cameras have auto flash levelling these days, which cancels out any 'burning' (bright white areas) on the main subject (depending on your metering mode - the bit that evaluates the light levels within the image). So, a breakdown; ISO = sensitivity of the sensor to the light available in the frame. The lower, the better the image with look, but you need to be aware of the exposure level. Aperture = diameter of the opening which the light travels through to reach the sensor. This determines Depth of Field. the lower the Aperture level, the bigger the hole, the more the background will be blurred in comparison to the main subject. Shutter speed = how long the blades open for exposing the sensor to the light. Please note that with compact cameras, although these options may exist, they are really only pseudo settings. Compact cameras merely use software to simulate these effects as all that happens when you press the button is that the sensor is turned on for a period of time determined by the shutter speed setting. In SLR / DSLR cameras, the settings affect physical parameters. If you need any more help or explanations, please let me know. I'm quite into photography! |
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