Might be a stupid question, but how do you get such consistent detail, color and clarity across each photo? These are beautiful
That first picture is beautiful!
Not easy, but you've managed to do it. Click on the jpgs and the images are really clear.My ongoing mission to photograph bees in motion.
ISO 640
Shutter Speed 1/800
F5.6
OM1 with 300mm lens
Good on you. I have also had that ongoing mission. Would you like to see my hundreds of photos of slightly out of focus flowers where the bee had been a moment ago??My ongoing mission to photograph bees in motion.
ISO 640
Shutter Speed 1/800
F5.6
OM1 with 300mm lens
Thank you that mean a lot. I have been watching a lot of YouTube videos and like the colourful saturated style (I am often concerned that I over saturate).Might be a stupid question, but how do you get such consistent detail, color and clarity across each photo? These are beautiful
Thank you that mean a lot. I have been watching a lot of YouTube videos and like the colourful saturated style (I am often concerned that I over saturate).
I really like the vivid colour style and changed my camera to the settings suggested in the video.
I also took a lot of advice in light room from this video. Especially the colour picker bit, finding a colour theme in the picture and making them more vivid (I went a bit far on the red tree one).
Yes the sun does help, especially this time of year when it isn't too bright and all consuming.And of course you have the sun! Unlike our dreary greyness.....
I was over there in the early 1990s with a film point and shoot. Obviously with only 36 pictures a roll, and being on a tight backpackers budget, we were careful what we took photos of. I have wondered since what it would have been like with a digital camera. Frightening probably! Instead of playing chess and chatting in hostels, I would have been weeding out thousands of pictures on my tablet or whatever.Yes the sun does help, especially this time of year when it isn't too bright and all consuming.
I have just checked him out and he is still going strong. His wildlife is amazing.I was over there in the early 1990s with a film point and shoot. Obviously with only 36 pictures a roll, and being on a tight backpackers budget, we were careful what we took photos of. I have wondered since what it would have been like with a digital camera. Frightening probably! Instead of playing chess and chatting in hostels, I would have been weeding out thousands of pictures on my tablet or whatever.
Is Steve Parish still going - I brought home a wonderful 'coffee table' book of his.
I get together with 3-4 'older' guys every month or so in the pub, and we set a theme for our next meeting. They often lose me, as they started out with darkrooms and home development and the like. Fascinating, but not sure I'd want to go there - all sounds far too much effort.I have just checked him out and he is still going strong. His wildlife is amazing.
Conversely I wonder what it would have been like learning in the pre digital age, my thinking is it would have taken far longer and require far more skill and knowledge.
Yeah, I probably should have mentioned the taking shit loads of photos and trying different stuff is also my 'technique'.
That's a great idea.I get together with 3-4 'older' guys every month or so in the pub, and we set a theme for our next meeting. They often lose me, as they started out with darkrooms and home development and the like. Fascinating, but not sure I'd want to go there - all sounds far too much effort.
Yes it would have. In the old days 'pre digital' you had to know what you were doing especially with regard to how various lighting conditions affected the film that you were using. I used to do a lot of travel and hotel photography for tour operators and we had to use transparency (slide) film and you only had a half stop latitude either side to get the exposure right, so get the exposure wrong and the pic would be ruined. There weren't many of us that could work consistently to those standards and as a consequence it was very well paid and it kept out a large percentage of would be photographers who didn't have the confidence in their abilities. The old adage 'you're only as good as your last job' was always on your mind.I have just checked him out and he is still going strong. His wildlife is amazing.
Conversely I wonder what it would have been like learning in the pre digital age, my thinking is it would have taken far longer and require far more skill and knowledge.
Yeah, I probably should have mentioned the taking shit loads of photos and trying different stuff is also my 'technique'.