Been out practising with my new camera
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david burton
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are you having trouble with night pics under sodium light?
you will want to change the white balance to get a true colour map if you are. other than that you'll just have to practice more.
some good effects can be had with a long exposure and a quick zoom-in at the end of the exposure, can create some nice light lines on the picture.
I have a D50 and I have to say the kit lens is surprisingly good for people shots and other indoors shooting. I also bought a 55-200D lens which is much heavier and good for zoom-in shots.
for more help you can visit www.kenrockwell.com
you will want to change the white balance to get a true colour map if you are. other than that you'll just have to practice more.
some good effects can be had with a long exposure and a quick zoom-in at the end of the exposure, can create some nice light lines on the picture.
I have a D50 and I have to say the kit lens is surprisingly good for people shots and other indoors shooting. I also bought a 55-200D lens which is much heavier and good for zoom-in shots.
for more help you can visit www.kenrockwell.com
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DanDiesel
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- Location: Kent Drives: VW Bora Highline
whats it like? i think (from looking at it) that getting the correct set up would be easier on the Sony than something like the Canons because there is a seperate dial that u twist to go to different settings, whereas with a Canon, u'd have to go thru the menus! i think that how they work?
I've got this camera as well, the S5600 - it's fairly cheap but does some good work, def a good buy. For night shots a tripod is essential (or the roof of a mates car!).
My only gripe with it is the noise is pretty high at night, but it can be tweaked in photoshop to eliminate most of the noise - the shots Dino took look pretty clean, maybe he's tidied them up already?
Anyway, incase you want to have a go tidying up noisy shots, try using the noise filter, median. Apply it at 1, when the photo is a full size. If you apply it at a reduced size, it can strip out the detail too much.
G
My only gripe with it is the noise is pretty high at night, but it can be tweaked in photoshop to eliminate most of the noise - the shots Dino took look pretty clean, maybe he's tidied them up already?
Anyway, incase you want to have a go tidying up noisy shots, try using the noise filter, median. Apply it at 1, when the photo is a full size. If you apply it at a reduced size, it can strip out the detail too much.
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