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Showing posts with label Canon EOS 550D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canon EOS 550D. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

The Hippocratic Oath of a Photographer: Photo Clichés of the 1930s


Back in 1937, art director M.F. Agha wrote a piece in U.S. Camera magazine titled The Hippocratic Oath of a Photographer, which warns photographs not to pursue common photographic clichés that were saturating the industry. It’s an interesting glimpse into what popular photo subjects were back in the day.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Stolen Camera Search Engine Crawls the Web for Serial Numbers

The Stolen Camera Finder is a new search engine developed over the past two years by programmer Matt Burns.
His idea is to search the web for photographs that have a stolen camera’s serial number embedded in the EXIF information. It uses two web crawlers — the first is a standard one that accesses Flickr’s API, while the second is a Google Chrome browser plugin that silently runs in the background and peeks at the serial numbers of images on any webpage viewed. These serial numbers and URLs are stored in a database, and if you’d like to volunteer your browsing for this you can download the Chrome plugin here.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Night Photography Recommendations and Tricks


Fireworks Photography
A typical picture of fireworks is taken having a method involving holding a black card in front of an open shutter. In manual publicity mode, set the shutter velocity to 20-30 seconds (or use bulb mode), an aperture of F11 to F16 and an ISO setting of one hundred or 200. Using the bulb mode in your DSLR, you can get the shutter to remain open so long as needed. For anyone who is employing the bulb mode, a remote shutter release is quite beneficial to keep away from finding digital camera shake (sure it can take place even on the sturdy tripod). Should you do not possess a remote release, it is possible to also use your DSLR self timer, set it to 10 seconds to ensure that you are able to give it time to settle down any moment shakes, if any, triggered by pressing the shutter button.
The black card is used to block the lens throughout any intervals when the fireworks aren’t showing inside the sky, to ensure that the long publicity is optimized to report the fireworks instead of over-expose other components from the scene. The second reason is to ensure that you do not file any smoke brought on by the fireworks. Consider care to not accidentally touch the lens, or you may trigger some motion that can result in camera shake.

Timing is Vital
The solitary most significant tip I can provide you with regarding night photography would be to get a superb tripod. With a sturdy tripod, you could use probably the most fundamental digital camera and lens and come out with a winning shot. Armed with a tripod, the subsequent factor to perform would be to scout for a superb location exactly where you are able to setup your tripod and wait for the twilight hour once the quantity of ambient light matches the amount of artificial light. This results in pictures exactly where the sky is actually a deep blue coloration, perfect for offsetting the man-made lights inside the scene. For anyone who is shooting a reduced ISO setting like 100 at this time, as well as your aperture within the F11-F16 assortment, your shutter speed will drop to a stage where it truly is not feasible to maintain your digital camera steady. That is why you’ll need a tripod.
A tripod is valuable for shooting stationary topics, which is why wedding photographers rarely have tripods when they are on the move, shooting moving topics.
In case you are shooting a scenic night landscape, overlook about employing flash, unless you will discover human subjects inside a few ft from the digital camera. Your flash unit, typically a speedlight, will only be effective inside a couple of feet. It will not be able to illuminate a evening scene which is 800 metres absent. In addition to, shooting with an on-camera speedlight seldom outcomes inside a all-natural looking outdoor night scene.

Shooting Light Trails
Use a tiny aperture (which implies a major F-number like F16) to get starburst results on street lamps. Not only does a little aperture provide you with far more depth-of-field (which implies objects are sharp from front to back again), furthermore, it permits you to get longer shutter speeds, which contribute to the lengthy red lines produced by the tail-lights of passing motorists. Or white lines developed by their headlights. The easiest mode to shoot this really is Aperture Priority.
The best Method Makes the Shot
You do not need high-end equipment to acquire good photos. All you will need will be the appropriate know-how.

- Ahmad Faiz Mustafa