getting to know the camera (lotta pics)
holy crap! its been a while since i've been on
but im back now..
here's some pics i took since i've been gone...
(notice how they get better as i learn to play with the settings)

















then messed with the settings yesterday and..












and one for giggles..

quick lil shot of my motor

here's some pics i took since i've been gone...
(notice how they get better as i learn to play with the settings)

















then messed with the settings yesterday and..












and one for giggles..

quick lil shot of my motor

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Last edited by skunkdSiR; May 3, 2007 at 07:33 AM.
I like how the first ones turned out, but towards the end they started having ALOT of noise(that would mean the ISO is too high, right?) Im new to the whole SLR stuff, but im sure someone will point you in the right direction. Good job!
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Exactly Twanksta...
Noise is basically the digital version of film grain. It looks kinda like grain, but can look like ugly speckles or color artifacts. You get this from a variety of sources, including sampling errors in pixels, temperature-induced "dark current" in sensor elements, and signal amplification circuits.
Just as high-speed film gets more grain than low-speed film, digital photos taken at high ISO settings show much more noise than photos taken at low ISO settings. All compact digital cameras show noise at ISO 400 or above. Even top-of-the-line digital SLRs can have noise at high ISO settings.
You can use photoshop and decrease the noise. Nice pics though man.
...I think im going to put this in the Photography Tech sticky, just more detailed.
Noise is basically the digital version of film grain. It looks kinda like grain, but can look like ugly speckles or color artifacts. You get this from a variety of sources, including sampling errors in pixels, temperature-induced "dark current" in sensor elements, and signal amplification circuits.
Just as high-speed film gets more grain than low-speed film, digital photos taken at high ISO settings show much more noise than photos taken at low ISO settings. All compact digital cameras show noise at ISO 400 or above. Even top-of-the-line digital SLRs can have noise at high ISO settings.
You can use photoshop and decrease the noise. Nice pics though man.
...I think im going to put this in the Photography Tech sticky, just more detailed.
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Last edited by DD.; May 3, 2007 at 11:52 AM.




ill lower the iso down next time and see wat i can come up with.. i've only been doin photography for a few weeks so im still learning!
