She's cute.
I'm getting closer to my 50D btw. I might be contacting you for some last minute advice soon .
I'm getting closer to my 50D btw. I might be contacting you for some last minute advice soon .
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Cool!Kmarion wrote:
She's cute.
I'm getting closer to my 50D btw. I might be contacting you for some last minute advice soon .
Mmmyea, that is definitely out of my budget.mcminty wrote:
Cool!Kmarion wrote:
She's cute.
I'm getting closer to my 50D btw. I might be contacting you for some last minute advice soon .
I wanna get another camera to compliment my 40D (cause changing lenses when i'm covering cadet things is a total bitch). A 1D3. Lol, will never happen.
Or a 5D. That is possible since the 5Dmk2 came out. Prices are coming down. Hmm...
I saw that in one of your captions. I will check it out.mcminty wrote:
I guess I should give a shout out to the place I learnt all of this lighting stuff.
Strobist - Learn How To Light
I learned that when I bought my first lens. It was almost as much as my camera .mcminty wrote:
Be wary Kerry. It's a long and expensive downhill from here..
Both of my L series lenses are more than the camera body.Kmarion wrote:
I learned that when I bought my first lens. It was almost as much as my camera .mcminty wrote:
Be wary Kerry. It's a long and expensive downhill from here..
I see. Big difference?mcminty wrote:
The EF-S Lenses haven't been designated as L-series due to the fact that they are not designed for full frame sensors. And that they also lack the same L-series type construction and ruggedness.
Construction and image quality.mcminty wrote:
About the full frame thing, or the lens construction?
lol, for that price you get an EOS 40D camera body over here D:Kmarion wrote:
This I had to share .
http://i40.tinypic.com/2cdakaq.jpg
Holy hell
http://www.prophotonation.com/DIGITAL-S … -p361.html
Last edited by Jenspm (2009-01-31 01:02:53)
LOLSCAMKmarion wrote:
There is something screwy going on there. The packages, which include the camera in there list, are cheaper than the cameras by themselves.
The RRP of a 1Ds3 is.. $11,999 (australian dollars). Canon don't make a 17-70 f/2.8 lens, or 70-300 "macro" lens.scam wrote:
PACKAGE INCLUDES:
CANON EOS 1DS MARK III
17-70 2.8 LENSE
70-300 4.0 MACRO LENSE
10 GIG MEMORY CARD
CARD READER
PRO TRIPOD
PRO LENSE CLEANING KIT
LCD SCREEN PROTECTOR
SOFT CASE
MONOPOD
CAMERA FLASH
HARD CASE
WRIST STRAP
LENSE POUCH
CAP KEEPER
BATTERY GRIP
Yes please.mcminty wrote:
If anyone has any questions on technique, or questions about Canon gear (cause thats what I use), feel free to ask away!
Learn your levels in Photoshop. .. or go into lab mode (protect your colors) and use the highlights/shadows adjustment in advanced mode. mcminty can probably help you out without doing it post processing though.Jenspm wrote:
Yes please.mcminty wrote:
If anyone has any questions on technique, or questions about Canon gear (cause thats what I use), feel free to ask away!
If I'm trying to take a picture of something and the sun is shining straight at me (example, taking a picture of a mountain, and the sun is right above it), what do I do?
I'm a complete amateur at this, never really changed any settings when taking pictures other than the standard "night time" and "movement" settings.
And I'm using a pretty good Sony Cybershot Karl Zeiss something or another non-SLR camera.
yeah, I was thinking more adjusting camera settings, but thanks - I'll try thatKmarion wrote:
Learn your levels in Photoshop. .. or go into lab mode (protect your colors) and use the highlights/shadows adjustment in advanced mode. mcminty can probably help you out without doing it post processing though.Jenspm wrote:
Yes please.mcminty wrote:
If anyone has any questions on technique, or questions about Canon gear (cause thats what I use), feel free to ask away!
If I'm trying to take a picture of something and the sun is shining straight at me (example, taking a picture of a mountain, and the sun is right above it), what do I do?
I'm a complete amateur at this, never really changed any settings when taking pictures other than the standard "night time" and "movement" settings.
And I'm using a pretty good Sony Cybershot Karl Zeiss something or another non-SLR camera.
Long story short...First off, I took this with an old point and shoot while on a 62km 5 day hike. It was sunset on the first night, and everyone had stopped to take photos. Most people were just using their cameras on automatic mode, where the camera chooses the exposure (aperture and shutterspeed) for them. Their camera's would try to expose for the foreground. As a result, the sky would look WAY too bright and the photo would be ruined (maybe what is happening to you).
TO fix this problem, I set the camera to manual mode and put in my own aperture and shutter speed values. From the artistic point of view the colours in the sky were much more interesting than the valley in the foreground. So, I set my exposure to capture the detail in the sky/sun.
The sky was actually slightly darker than the photo shows, but I decided to overexpose the image slightly to get some more detail in the foreground. The lighter colours as the different parts of the valley progress to the background of the frame give the photo a 3D quality, a bit of depth. It makes for a much more interesting photo.
Another point to note when taking photos with the sun, especially around sunset - Set the White Balance on your camera to "daylight". If you let the camera decide, it will try to make the golden sunlight "white", thus washing out the colour from the sunset shot. I can post an example of the same shot with different white balance if anyone wants.