Post any photos or flickr accounts that you want to share
Heres mine: http://www.flickr.com/photos/53448595@N03/
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Post any photos or flickr accounts that you want to share
Heres mine: http://www.flickr.com/photos/53448595@N03/
Nice pics...:thumb:
I haven't seen a dog like that before... What's it ? :p
Which camera are you using ?
Please tell the method you used for taking the trailing light effect and the torch effect.
:wave:
Check my signature. The signature is dynamically generated based on my latest photos, have a look here if you're interested.
Thanks :)
Im using a cannon eos 1000D and its a poodle :) i think its just a small breed
To do the light trail:
you need a room that is pitch black and a tripod.
set you camera exposure to like 15" (15 secs) or more!
put it on the tripod or somthing very steady
take the picture and wave the torch around
DONE!!! :D
enjoy snapping ;)
Thnx :thumb:
Nice pictures :) I really liked the one with the lady bird.
And you have the same camera as I have, so if I could, I would rate you ;)
Would you eat me if I did post my photos?
Does any one use tripods when photographing?
Yes, but only one at a time. I put it between the camera and the ground.
It's a Manfrotto (highly recommended, the construction quality is excellent) with a 3-axis head (pan, azimuth and roll). It's with spending some cash on a decent set of legs. Mine is a decent low-end model that set me back £100. It's got a quick-release plate too, which is actually a very good feature. It also has teflon coated contact surfaces to allow smooth panning and tilting, all axes are lockable via hand-tightened screws.
The heavier the tripod, the more stable it will be. DO NOT buy one where the legs are connected to one-another. That will limit your deployment options too much. Make sure the legs are completely independent of each other.
This is similar to the one I use...
http://www.bristolcameras.co.uk/p-ma...ead.htm#Images
I also bought the heaviest tripod in the shop, which I think is a Manfrotto as well. (I haven't used it for a while...)
It's very stable, but slow to adjust. This is ideal for long exposures but not good for wildlife.
The other tripod I have is a very lightweight, cheap thing. I put a ball head on it and use it to stabilise a telephoto lens for panning shots.
Here's my flickr pages. There are 4 pages of pictures.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/29197840@N05/
I ended up getting this one because is simply couldnt afford the £100 ones http://www.jessops.com/online.store/...7483/show.html
but its very sturdy and im happy with it
any one use any free programs for creating hdr's?
it give a kinda 'not real' effect to things :)
http://www.scottkelby.com/blog/wp-co...007/10/hdr.jpg
http://www.digitalcameratracker.com/.../hdr-truck.jpg
Photomatix is ideal for HDR. it is definitely cheaper than Photoshop. So far all my attempts with Photomatix have resulted in a collosal failure. :D
Photomatix is actually a pretty poor quality bit of software. The interface is dire, the image file support is deplorable and the results are best described as unpredictable. In my experience. I wish I hadn't wasted my £30 on it.
Photomatix is the only HDR app I've tried. The other's I've seen are either too expensive in themselves, look worse than photomatix or are a plugin for Photoshop, which I can't afford.
ive only tried the built-in photoshop one - very poor
anyone tested any free ones? (or even better) considered making one ;)