Took a lot dy.. that day i take aquarium photo but still the shot not very nice..very blur and the light not as i wish.. very dull..
jam up ur ISO... D90 ISO3200 still ok.. IMO noisier shots > blurry + noisy shots..
stick the front of ur lens to the aquarium glass... this helps to remove light reflections from the back and help stablize ur camera...
alternatively, use a jacket to cover the gap between the lens n the aquarium glass
if ur main subject is brighter/lighter than the background or the sence contrast is too big, use spot metering/exposure com to make sure ur main subject is expose correctly...
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some of my shots taken
This post has been edited by seather: Nov 30 2013, 02:26 PM
Nice shot man! Where is this? So beautiful (except the many wire poles) haha Maybe this shot will be better if the top part is chopped off.... just saying
some waterway in Bangkok...
i shot it from a moving boat
ya... the background is abit messy
This post has been edited by seather: Jan 17 2014, 08:41 PM
hey guys, got a question. Because Im helping a friend to take some photos of the layout for indoors. When I snapped, I use slow shutter. Then the windows will look overexpose.
What can be done to have a bright indoor photo at the same time the light from the windows are not overexposed which mean I can see the outside details too.
Does using CPL filters help or photo is to be corrected in photoshop?
i can think of a few ways
1) setup more lightning indoors...
2) take 2 exposures... one of the interior and one of the windows, combine in photoshop
3) HDR
nope, CPL does not help...
This post has been edited by seather: Jan 19 2014, 08:13 AM