Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Focus on the Eyes







The title explains it all! Anytime you are taking a photo, especially up close, focus on the subject's eyes. In this photo my daughter was standing right beneath me so I bent over, akwardly, and snapped this picture of her looking up at me! I had my 35mm f1.8 lens on while I was outside taking pictures of us and our neighbors playing in the snow. I made sure my shutter speed was fast enough. For this photo the shutter speed was super fast, 500 at an f4.5 ISO 1600.




I took this one of my neighbor's little boy who has the most handsome features of any little boy I know! I love the red hair and blue eyes! Again the shutter speed was fast because these little boogers move!! 640 at an f4.5 with ISO 1600.


Enjoy taking fun pictures of your kids, pets or family members!

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Noiseware Community Edition




Here's something fun! If you shoot your pictures in RAW then convert to JPEG through photoshop you can use this FREE software called Noiseware to smooth out your pictures! You can change the perameters so that you don't go overboard on the masking! Here's a before (bottom) and after (top)...

Crispy, Crispy!







So, now that I've been practicing with shutter speeds and apertures I feel like these photo's came out pretty good!








Here's what I did...



I took these pictures around 4:00pm. The sun comes in the back of my house as it sets so, I had lots of natural light! I made sure my shutter speed was between 150 and 200 because she was wiggling and my aperture was wide open at f1.8. When I opened these photo's in Lightroom I first adjust the white balance with the dropper then increase the exposure. I increase all of the sliders and turn up the masking. (If you want more details, just ask!) Basically, once I've decided it looks nice, I'm done!



Monday, February 1, 2010

Numbers, Numbers, what do you mean?

Answer from my neighbor!

"The numbers between 100 and 150 (in your view finder or info screen) were probably your shutter speed. Put a 1/### and it tells you how long your shutter is open for. So, if it said 100 it was open 1/100th of a second. The shorter it's open the better it can stop the action. If it's open too long it will be fuzzy due to camera shake or the subject moving.

A good rule of thumb is that you can hold 1/mm of the lens. But since your camera has a 1.5x smaller sensor you need to multiply it by 1.5. So, your 35mm lens can probably be hand held at 1/50th of a second assuming your subject is holding still. 1/100+ is a good number for an infant. 1/200 is good for a moving toddler, maybe even more."

I will experiement soon and post my results!!

Thanks for your help neighbor!!!