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Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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However, the shutter speed is too slow, so the little hand is coming up to warn of possible camera shake. It doesn't matter how steady your hand is, you are unlikely to avoid camera shake if the shutter speed drops below 1/60th of second without some sort of stability aide, such as a tripod or something to rest on. Also, the more you zoom, the more prone to shake a photo becomes, so that 1/60th sec will increase to anything up to 1/200th second. A rule of thumb of SLR cameras is you never drop your shutter speed below what your focal length on your lens is, eg 200mm lens needs a shutter speed faster than 1/200th second, but obviously on compacts this is difficult to guage sometimes. Quote:
To start emailing things, pick a reasonable image size like 600pixels by 400 pixels and a resolution of 72dpi (as computer screens don't display more than 72dpi unless you've got a Mac, in which case it's 96dpi). When printing, you should crop to the print size you want to make, eg 6x4" and a resolution of 300dpi (which is the standard for printing and the same resolution as our eyes see). Quote:
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I could go into a couple of pages as to how the relationship works, but I'd be asleep by the time I'd finsihed writing it. Save to say that keeping the ISO on 100 is good if you want grain free images. Adjusting the aperture will change the look of the image, as you say depth of field (which is also affected by zoom length) the lower the number, the more light going through the lens and shallower the depth of field (i.e foreground and background more likely to be blurred). And if you've not got enough light with the previous two settings then you need a longer exposure which is when you start getting camera shake! |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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Thanks andy and bender, you both seem to know your stuff on cameras. I am still reading through the manual and have taken a shot of my Birthday cake. I will add 2 pics, you can see they are not too good, i did have zoom on it, its not as crisp as i would like.
I took it on 5 megapixel on medium quality set to landscape mode. probably did everything wrong for that shot didnt i? All the cameras settings were on auto as well, ISO etc etc. I have used infraview to shrink my pictures file size with no loss of quality. I set some pics to 1500x1500 dpi. thats still to high then? would 300x300Dpi be enough? for keeping them for e mails and forums etc? The SD card came this morning and i had camera set to 5mp medium quality and it said i had 1500 shots left lol. I was like OMG!!!! I usually only take a maximum of 50 when i am out. Anyway i changed it to 7.1mp and super fine and i still have 600 to take with that so i am all set now for travels. My problem is batteries. My god how fast do they burn up? I used up 2 Duracel yesterday and managed about 20 Pics before it had gone, mind you i dont think they were brand new. I have 2 Duracel Ultra in at the moment, brand new, wonder how many i can get out of that, hmm. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
Hi-capacity rechargables is the only way to go with digital cameras.
The fact that it may use normal batteries is only really useful in emergency (is there such a thing oi photo terms) and don't have time for a recharge - so just have 2 sets |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
Recharageables are the way to go. Normal batteries just get used up really quickly in camera's.
As for the zoom quality. Sometimes forget the zoom altogether and get closer and use the macro feature. Yo'ul get a lot more detail, and crisper photo when taking close objects. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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It's different if you are planning to print the picture on a large-format printer (A3, A2, A1 or larger), or are planning to work on it within photoshop or a similar image editing application. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
Can anyone reccomend any high capacity rechargable batteries? good ones?
How long will they last on average? Like 50 shots with flash or something? I normally take my picture and turn the cam off to save battery life. Also do you have any links to these batteries that will accept paypal? Sorry i am totally new to this, never used rechargable batteries before so no idea what to look for or what is the best options. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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Now, going back to what Bender and I were on about... here's lesson two! Exposure is measured in stops. f/2.8 is ONE LESS than f1.4 but ONE MORE than f/4. Your first shot was as f/2.8 which is a wide aperture. Your second shot was at f/4.2 (which isn't really an f/ stop, as one less than 4.2 is f/5.6!!!) Confused? It took me a while to grasp this one when I was learning it too. So, the relationship between aperture and shutter speed is as follows: If you have an aperture of f/4 and shutter speed of 1/30th sec, by increasing the aperture by one stop to f/2.8 (widening the aperture) you also increase the shutter speed by one stop, from 1/30th sec to 1/60th sec. ISO comes into this to as Bender said...in your first example your camera selected an ISO of 191 (which again is not a true ISO, so lets say it's 200). By increasing the ISO to 400 you are gaining another stop. So if we use the same exmaple of your f/4 aperture increase it again to f/2.8 and now we increase your 200ISO to 400, the shutter speed goes from 1/30th sec, through 1/60th (as increasing aperture got us this) and up to 1/125th sec shutter speed, which is a nice all round speed with no fear of camera shake at most focal lengths on your camera. Does that make any sense? (Don't worry if it doesn't, it didn't to me for a long time too). If I remember, I will try and fish out my study in first year photography that I (eventually) grasped this relationship. If your camera has one, try setting it to shutter priority mode and manually set a shutter speed of at least 1/60th, preferably 1/125th sec and let camera sort out ISOs and apertures...see the difference it makes! Enjoy playing! Quote:
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So what youre saying is manually change ISO to 400 - 800? For shots? This will reduce camera shake and blurry images? Sorry i know noting about apperture and focal lengths. Theres nothing on my camera about these settings, the only settings it allows me to change are... ISO - Auto,80,100,200,400,800,1000 White Balance - Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Flourecent, Tungstun, Custom Exposure Compensation - -2.0 ~ 0.0 ~ +2.0 ~ (0.5EV Steps) Also with reading the manual i discovered the camera has an option of Continuous shot which can take Continuous shots until the shutter button is released, or AEB which is 3 pictures at different expsures. Under, normal, and over. Manually the apparture is F2.8 + 7.1 Switchable When I zoom in it changes values also switchable. The shutter speed I can also change 1/15,1/30,1/45 Etc etc |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
The darker the area the more you want to increase the ISO. Higher ISO, means more sensitivity to light.
You will get images with to some extent less blur but the higher the ISO, the more noise that will appear in the image. By noise, I mean spots and graininess. See here for more info and examples: http://www.dpreview.com/learn/?/Glos...itivity_01.htm http://www.dpreview.com/learn/?/Glos...xposure_01.htm |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
No idea if they take paypal but just for reference
Link Look for the more mAh - bigger the number , generally lasts longer Then you need a charger Link Most tend to be mains ones, but there are some in-car ones too some come with batts too, again look for a big mAh number Not a bad option here link main s + 12v car charging + 2700 bats x 4 |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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Having said that, I didn't take the photo, so only have the other technician's word that he was using a high quality JPEG setting. Sadly, he kept the file as well. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
RAW is the data that the senson recieves, unmodified, so no whitebalance affected, no compression etc.
Great if you want to touch up the photo afterwards in photoshop, but as has been said, for most snappers jpg is good enough. I love using RAW, but most of my shots need to be up on the web within a few hours of getting home, so I generally use jpeg, but if I'm taking any arty photos I'll use RAW just because then I've got the greatest number of options open to me. |
Re: Photography Question - Digi Cam
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Hi Guys.
Ok Today I have been out with my Samsung S700. I took on board what people have been saying and I am still learning, however if it hadnt have been for andy pointing out apperture, focal length, ISO etc then I would have had it set on Auto all the time which would have been useless today. Today was sunny, not the brightest day weve had but it was bright outside. I took some pictures WITH and WITHOUT auto function. I was suprised at the difference it made. I set the Manual mode to 1/60th Shutter Speed. Most were taken 1/90th Though. The decent one below is 1/90th. The gloomy dark one is AUTO. And the 3rd one Is one i took which is how i want it all the time really, if possible to make it better then wicked. This was Manual 1/90th. The Focus was 7.1 But i did zoom in and out on some pictures and the Focus changed obviously. I dont understand what reducing the focus does, it allows me to change between two. If i am not zoomed in and its set Focus 7.1 and Shutter Speed is 1/90th I can change the Focus to 2.1 or back to 7.1. When I zoom this changes different values. I have options to change from AWB / Sunny / Cloudy. Theres other modes but they are for indoors. When I choose cloudy i get more vivid colour, Sunny makes it darker. And most inc the ones i added were done using AWB. No idea what that means lol. ISO Was set to Auto as well on the pictures even though it was in Manual mode for some shots, I dont know if that is a wise idea or not? As you can see in picture one. Its like what i started with my old camera. The background is dark, no detail in the trees, gloomy looking. This is why i got the Samsung Camera. Using Manual the Second picture is far better, no detail in the sky though like picture one but you can pick the detail up better, looks like a decent pic to me, Novice with no idea what he is doing lol. So definately helps knowing about these focal lengths and Shutter speeds. Focal length still confusing me :monkey: The third picture seemed to come out great, cant remember if i used Macro mode in Manual for this shot or not. Or if i should have done that. I found though even in Manual mode "Some" pictures came out a little dark while others were nice and bright. Does this have something to do with where the sun is shining? Ie if its behind me do i use more shutter speed?, If its in front of me I use less? Or is that all wrong lol. Sorry if it is. Anyway heres the pics. Any advice would be helpfull. I didnt mess with the apparture with these pics or the ISO. Only the Shutter speed and AWB for manual mode and gloomy pic is Auto mode. |
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