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Winter Wonderland!


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#1 starburst552

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Posted 10 January 2010 - 02:33 PM

:popcorn: :artist: :ph34r: :yoda: :404:

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Tell me what you think please!

Edited by starburst552, 17 January 2010 - 03:26 PM.


#2 theguid

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Posted 12 January 2010 - 11:21 PM

I think you did well on many of these. What kind of camera did you use for them? I see some noise and maybe some exposure/white balance being off, but I'd hazard a guess it was a limitation of the camera. The shot selections are interesting, which is good in photography. I like that the first two almost look like symmetrical images, that's a pretty cool capture!

#3 xXx-Treme

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Posted 14 January 2010 - 12:14 AM

Hey!
It is nice to see some activity in photography corner!
Well first think I saw - a lot of chromatic abberation there, on the sides of trunks... Second you have wanted to capture the details and give us the feeling... You have shot in automatic mode with your finepix camera.... Well try manual as much as your camera is capable... You should have step up the exposure more. And for my eye, there is too much on these photos...
It is better to use minimalism when shooting winter: http://looduspilt.ee...&...=0&otsi.y=0 some examples here


Anyway keep don't give up, experiment and show us the results!

#4 starburst552

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Posted 17 January 2010 - 02:14 PM

I think you did well on many of these. What kind of camera did you use for them? I see some noise and maybe some exposure/white balance being off, but I'd hazard a guess it was a limitation of the camera. The shot selections are interesting, which is good in photography. I like that the first two almost look like symmetrical images, that's a pretty cool capture!


I use a Fuji Film S1500. Thanks for your input and comment!

#5 starburst552

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Posted 17 January 2010 - 02:16 PM

I think you did well on many of these. What kind of camera did you use for them? I see some noise and maybe some exposure/white balance being off, but I'd hazard a guess it was a limitation of the camera. The shot selections are interesting, which is good in photography. I like that the first two almost look like symmetrical images, that's a pretty cool capture!


I see what you mean, Thanks for the advice. i'll try using manual more, and making the photos more directed at one object rather than 50 ;).

Thanks Again!

#6 Faken

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Posted 26 January 2010 - 03:40 PM

Yeah use manual... all the pics seem a bit underexposed. Nice topic though :)

#7 EuroFlash

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Posted 04 February 2010 - 03:54 PM

Starburst552,
I see quite some noise on your photos, it's hard for me to decide what should be improved.
Because I don't really like any of the photos because of the bad quality. I suggest you to buy a new camera, or if you don't have the money to do so, use Photoshop to resize the photos and try to experiment with the ''levels'' and ''curves'' function.

- EuroFlash

#8 xXx-Treme

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Posted 18 February 2010 - 12:22 PM

Starburst552,
I see quite some noise on your photos, it's hard for me to decide what should be improved.
Because I don't really like any of the photos because of the bad quality. I suggest you to buy a new camera, or if you don't have the money to do so, use Photoshop to resize the photos and try to experiment with the ''levels'' and ''curves'' function.

- EuroFlash


Well I would say DON'T to EuroFlash ideas...
First you don't need to buy a new camera at first place, learn to know your camera, learn to use it, find out it strong sides and concentrate on situation where it can perform well. It is still the photographer who makes the shot, not the camera. I started off with Sony's DSC-S40, and even learned to push it's limits even further. I.E you can easily hold a magnifying class in front of your camera lens to increase it's macro capability.

Don't resize your photos at first place. Do some editing needed first and try eliminating faults that you can see. You can resize them later when publishing on net. But yea, learn to use photoshop to edit images.... :)
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#9 _*aprillove20_*

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 06:33 AM

Nice photos. You done it well.




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