This is excellent, I would love to take similar close up photos. Do you need a special lens for these kind of shots? are these Macro?The Family Ice out for a walk with their Ice Dog.
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PS - it's been cold up here....
Thank you!This is excellent, I would love to take similar close up photos. Do you need a special lens for these kind of shots? are these Macro?
Lovely photos. Keep them coming. You can't post enough photos on here.I read somewhere that it is all about finding good light.
I am currently in the mountains in Tasmania and the light is incredible so I apologise in adavance for the probably bombardment of photos over the next few days.
Wow, I think you win it for "best test subject" with that mountain range!I read somewhere that it is all about finding good light.
I am currently in the mountains in Tasmania and the light is incredible so I apologise in adavance for the probably bombardment of photos over the next few days.
Thank you . Yes the mountain range is brilliant to have sitting right there.Wow, I think you win it for "best test subject" with that mountain range!
The tight pink/blue shot with the house in the lower corner is something else, great job
For the blurry background, use a big aperture, f4 or bigger ie a lower number. Even smartphones these days allow you to adjust aperture.This is excellent, I would love to take similar close up photos. Do you need a special lens for these kind of shots? are these Macro?
My advice would be to set aside a few hours to watch a few tutorial videos on YouTube. That's tutorials both for your particular camera, and on DSLR photography in general. There are loads of them, mostly very useful and well put together. Make sure you have a notebook handy and jot down the important points because there's quite a lot to take in. It's not difficult as such but there's a lot of information. Consider joining a local camera/photography club. Good luck, it's a great hobby.Very new to this photography lark. Got a cannon Eos 3000D for Christmas and had a crack using Darktable for post.
Any advice would be gladly received. Will read the whole thread in bits to find wisdown as it is pretty long.
Thank you that sounds like a great idea. I did buy a cheap course online but the guy doesn't seem to be the best communicator so I kind of stopped watching. I will try again or try something else when I get back from holiday.My advice would be to set aside a few hours to watch a few tutorial videos on YouTube. That's tutorials both for your particular camera, and on DSLR photography in general. There are loads of them, mostly very useful and well put together. Make sure you have a notebook handy and jot down the important points because there's quite a lot to take in. It's not difficult as such but there's a lot of information. Consider joining a local camera/photography club. Good luck, it's a great hobby.
Many of the settings will be recorded electronically for you as well.I am thinking a notebook to record settings and ideas as I try them.
Yes Flickr seems really good for this. I like seeing what settings other people use.Many of the settings will be recorded electronically for you as well.
You'll find a few NSC-ers on Flickr.Yes Flickr seems really good for this. I like seeing what settings other people use.
I'll look out for them.You'll find a few NSC-ers on Flickr.
Thank you!
Yes, this was with a Macro lens, and making sure the camera was rock solid (ie: sat on the wall top alongside). You can get pretty good close-ups out of a decent prime / zoom lens now though - just not quite as crystal sharp (pun wasn't intended, but I may as well leave it in!).
Okay, I tried this. Started watching the course I bought and struggled to understand what he was on about. So I did some googling and youtubing and tried the marco photo thing.My advice would be to set aside a few hours to watch a few tutorial videos on YouTube. That's tutorials both for your particular camera, and on DSLR photography in general. There are loads of them, mostly very useful and well put together. Make sure you have a notebook handy and jot down the important points because there's quite a lot to take in. It's not difficult as such but there's a lot of information. Consider joining a local camera/photography club. Good luck, it's a great hobby.
That's bloomin' brilliant that is! Really needs entering into some kind of photo competitionThe Family Ice out for a walk with their Ice Dog.
View attachment 172437
PS - it's been cold up here....
You'll get much better bokeh (background blurriness), if you can put as much distance between your subject and the back ground. Experiment with macro settings, but I wouldn't go above F11. I like between F5.6-F11. The lower the F number, the blurrier the background, but be careful bits of the subject aren't blurry too.Okay, I tried this. Started watching the course I bought and struggled to understand what he was on about. So I did some googling and youtubing and tried the marco photo thing.
Here are the results: Not bad after a little tweaking and cropping.