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Originally Posted by mobike008
(Post 917445)
@CD, amazing shots of the cats. Both are quite nice in its own way. B&W pic is beautiful expression and the color one is full of detail. Great job!!! Btw, where did you get a chance to click them? Camera details? |
Originally Posted by rippergeo
(Post 917602)
@crazy driver- i know I said that black and white is not interesting. I take it back.:) the colour photo looks better than the original you'd posted on Flickr. did you PP it further? or is it just my imagination? very nice pics, I'm going to start stalking the cats around my house. |
Originally Posted by rippergeo
(Post 917684)
more pics from that trip can be seen at Flickr: hey!jude's Photostream |
Originally Posted by guyonblackybx
(Post 917791)
Another HDR. |
Originally Posted by CrAzY dRiVeR
(Post 917902)
Nice. Loved the one with the orange flowers. One question- Is RAW available only in manual mode? |
Originally Posted by CrAzY dRiVeR
(Post 917902)
HDR shows a lot of details! |
Originally Posted by rippergeo
(Post 917990)
Thanks- yes, in the Canon-RAW is available only in the manual mode. which is a pain.:Frustrati |
Originally Posted by rippergeo
(Post 917990)
Thanks- yes, in the Canon-RAW is available only in the manual mode. which is a pain.:Frustrati |
Originally Posted by NIP
(Post 918020)
a tiny flower welcoming the lovely monsoons to bangalore. shot on my panasonic fz18...trying to learn :) gurus please feel free to comment. |
Originally Posted by NIP
(Post 918020)
a tiny flower welcoming the lovely monsoons to bangalore. shot on my panasonic fz18...trying to learn gurus please feel free to comment. |
Originally Posted by jkdas
(Post 918119)
Crazy great pix. And you too ripper and YBX |
Originally Posted by jkdas
(Post 918119)
Crazy great pix. And you too ripper and YBX:) |
Originally Posted by guyonblackybx
(Post 918011)
Yeah It does :P Thats why I like to create HDRs. :D That makes sense. I mean when person doesn't want to take pain of changing settings to get a good shot, why would he take pain of editing a RAW file? As a manufacturer I wud thinkg on same lines :D |
Originally Posted by rippergeo
(Post 918468)
There are situations where out in the open, there is no time to decide the best ISO+exposure+aperture+white balance. you'd want to keep your attention on purely composing. you would also want the maximum amount of data that the camera can pick up. for example, that last pic which is cropped weird, it had already started to rain, and i could not afford to get the camera wet, so I squeezed off a shot in auto mode and ran back to the car. if only it had been in RAW- I would have had a lot more room to maneuver. the crop and composition were already planned as soon as i saw the scene, but because the light was changing so fast, I had no prev Exposure setting that could be relied upon to give a good result, and I'm not an expert to guess which setting would be best under those condition(I hope it will come with practice) i had time for one hurried shot in manual focus and then I had to escape. I came back to the same spot about 2hrs later, but the scene looked very different(disappointing) |
Originally Posted by mansidea
(Post 918637)
Crazy, those where your best pics, i have seen. Looks like a professional job. |
Originally Posted by guyonblackybx
(Post 919031)
Tell you what? as far as I am concerned I use Aperture priority for such situations. Where as for action shots I use Shutter Priority. If its dark then go for 400 ISO or above. day ilght keep ISO at 100 or min available. |
Originally Posted by guyonblackybx
(Post 919031)
Hey you can use Aperture priority for this kind of situation. I mean set the aperture and forget about other things simple :D. Aperture mode does allow to shoot in raw right? Tell you what? as far as I am concerned I use Aperture priority for such situations. Where as for action shots I use Shutter Priority. If its dark then go for 400 ISO or above. day ilght keep ISO at 100 or min available. Hope the above helps you to decide which settings to use in such conditions :D. |
Originally Posted by CrAzY dRiVeR
(Post 919460)
How to set focus to infinity? Is it landscape mode? (cause i think its the only mode that doesn't focus on anything) |
Originally Posted by rippergeo
(Post 919498)
another doubt, if the aperture setting decides how much of the scene is in focus, what does the manual focussing on the lens do? choose which part of the scene is in focus? |
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