I'm going to quote you, because it sucks being on the bottom of a page (maybe we can make that a convention). I like how the pavement really sticks out as a triangle.fart said:i've been trying to get comfortable posting them on facebook, where the people in question can see them, but even that is kind of icky.
there's definitely the issue of anonymity for all involved otherwise.
i guess there's also the question of like personal vs impersonal photo. i don't really have a problem with street photography, for example.
![]()
mrkgoo said:Aidan: Strangely, i'm not feeling these, except perhaps the old chair.
Colour and saturation are nice, though. Maybe a bit too intense?
Futureman said:What lens is that aidan? I don't really like the bokeh on it.
Futureman said:What lens is that aidan? I don't really like the bokeh on it.
aidan said:Hmm... not encouraging! :lol
It's a Canon 50mm f/1.8, a cheap-o prime lens, which might explain your problem with it. The only other thing I can think of is that the light has been kinda strange around here for the last several days and it's been an interesting challenge shooting in it.
Frankly, a but removed from actually shooting and touching up those photos, I can kinda see where you guys are coming from. The bokeh in most of them seems almost a little scratchy, if that makes any sense.
It's not limited to cheapness. I've seen the same effect from my 70-200f4l and 60mm macro under certain circumstances.Futureman said:I think my main problem is the first and last shot. The way the lens is rendering the out of focus branches just looks kinda weird to me. Bokeh is totally subjective though, so whatever, you can't please everyone.
I had the 50 1.8 (now use the Sigma 50/1.4) and it's a fine lens. Definitely gets the job done.
mrkgoo said:No offense, it's just these shots scream a little bit like "I have a new lens, I am taking random pictures". I know the exact feeling! Actually I feel a lot of my images are like that in general - which is why I'm trying to slow myself down to take images. It's really hard to get out while it's still light, and I'm trying to not just take photos for the sake of taking photos. I need to up my game!
Don't worry - I always insist new gear needs to be learned, no matter how talented you are. You have to get a feeling for its limits, so all the early shots are important.
mrkgoo said:It's not limited to cheapness. I've seen the same effect from my 70-200f4l and 60mm macro under certain circumstances.
aidan said:Oh that is 100%, unashamedly what they are! I'm on the other end of the spectrum, though, and feel that it's invaluable to take photos just for the sake of taking photos. I think some of my best shots (though, admittedly, some of my weakest, as well) have come from making an effort to get out with my camera and see what I can discover.
Part of the problem right now is that most of the time I'm insisting on shooting all of my shots with the shutter wide open (f/1.8-3ish) and not using the full range of the lens when appropriate.
*heart melts*Lucky Forward said:Polar bear in the snow:
Dogs are pack animals, and usually in a pack, a newcomer is ranked lower than the existing members. You can teach a dog that it's the lowest-ranked member (and you always should, which some dog-owners have problems with), but it's easier to do when you bring a dog into a ready "pack". I doubt a Westie could harm a baby even if it tried, but it's also a good incentive to have kids (we've thought of brilliant incentives other than this as well: you can buy toys "for the kid" etc.mrkgoo said:tf53: what effect does the rank have? I have many friends who have dogs first (lol, they are often the guy holding off on children) before kids - the dogs are wonderful guardians.
Sorry, it must be late, "Westie"? What's a good incentive to have kids? "toys"?Tf53 said:Dogs are pack animals, and usually in a pack, a newcomer is ranked lower than the existing members. You can teach a dog that it's the lowest-ranked member (and you always should, which some dog-owners have problems with), but it's easier to do when you bring a dog into a ready "pack". I doubt a Westie could harm a baby even if it tried, but it's also a good incentive to have kids (we've thought of brilliant incentives other than this as well: you can buy toys "for the kid" etc.).
Edit: There's also the matter of not having to care for a dog while nursing your firstborn. I'm expecting it to be hard enough without one.![]()
Westie = West Highland White Terrier. A small dog, if you will.mrkgoo said:Sorry, it must be late, "Westie"? What's a good incentive to have kids? "toys"?
I understand the pack thing, but what would a higher member do? Potentially harn or bully the child?
Lol, my friend and his wife got a dog , then had a baby. He insists the rank is (high to low): Wife -> daughter -> dog -> him.
Jeff-DSA said:I'm going to retake this shot with a more stable base so that the controller doesn't shake. I'd like it to be perfectly still while still showing my hand movement.
![]()
Rentahamster said:All you gotta do is retake the shot and not move your hands so quickly.
Reduce your ISO to 200 and increase your shutter speed to 8 seconds. Then, gently make motions with your hands to create the motion blur. If you do it softly and slowly enough, you won't disturb the controller base.
If that's not enough time, go to ISO 100 and 16 seconds.
When doing long exposure shots, you don't have to actually be moving fast to create that look in your photo.
My favourite of the tilt shifts, I've had a play with doing it in photoshop but I've not really had a decent subject. All 3 look good.Jeff-DSA said:I decided to fake some tilt-shift photography, but I have an old version of Photoshop so I don't have the proper filter (lens blur). I'll have to look into upgrading to CS4 real soon as I found this to be very entertaining. Here's what I could manage...
![]()






Thanks for the comments!Jeff-DSA said:mrkgoo, the tone in your shots is perfect. Your wide angle stuff is also very impressive.
fart, as always, good work. I dig the silhouette shots there.
Kawaii, can you get a shot of that structure near sunset? I think the warm colors could make that a killer looking shot.
There are some other good ones going on here. Nice work everybody.
Jeff-DSA said:For the faked tilt-shift stuff I'm just using my Canon 18-200 lens with my 40D. I'm only working with Photoshop 7.0, so I don't have lens blur as a filter. I need to fake my results using a combo of the other blurs, but I can't quite get the result I want. I'm thinking of picking up CS4 tomorrow as I just got some bonus money from a one-time job.
Jeff-DSA said:I decided to fake some tilt-shift photography, but I have an old version of Photoshop so I don't have the proper filter (lens blur). I'll have to look into upgrading to CS4 real soon as I found this to be very entertaining. Here's what I could manage...
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3649/3334440492_b7f34c1fb5_b.jpg[/IG]
[/QUOTE]edit: oops nevermind read thread lol wut
assuming you can't get a particularly inexpensive academic copy or similar, i don't really think cs4 is worth it. if all you need is different blurs, for example, a number of the free image editors have a nice variety of blurs -- plenty to do fake tilt shifting. i've gotten a ton more mileage out of lightroom for doing day to day processing. if you don't have that yet, that would be the one to prioritize.Jeff-DSA said:For the faked tilt-shift stuff I'm just using my Canon 18-200 lens with my 40D. I'm only working with Photoshop 7.0, so I don't have lens blur as a filter. I need to fake my results using a combo of the other blurs, but I can't quite get the result I want. I'm thinking of picking up CS4 tomorrow as I just got some bonus money from a one-time job.
fart said:assuming you can't get a particularly inexpensive academic copy or similar, i don't really think cs4 is worth it. if all you need is different blurs, for example, a number of the free image editors have a nice variety of blurs -- plenty to do fake tilt shifting. i've gotten a ton more mileage out of lightroom for doing day to day processing. if you don't have that yet, that would be the one to prioritize.
^^^^ yep, another way to tilt shift is to actually tilt and shift by actuating the shutter with the lens off the mount. light will leak, but this often makes things more fun.