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those are some good pics bro. Keep on shooting!
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those are some good pics bro. Keep on shooting!
First time shooting with the Sony A6000, huge learning curve imo.
All taken with basically no sunlight, went to the Culver steps after sunset and messed around
Not used to it at all; please be kind
Goddamnit the last one is so slanted, I should use the grid feature to fix that.
Used the 55-210mm lens; will probably try the kit lens tomorrow and see how it is.
Use a tripod next timeFirst time shooting with the Sony A6000, huge learning curve imo.
All taken with basically no sunlight, went to the Culver steps after sunset and messed around
Not used to it at all; please be kind
Goddamnit the last one is so slanted, I should use the grid feature to fix that.
Used the 55-210mm lens; will probably try the kit lens tomorrow and see how it is.
First time shooting with the Sony A6000, huge learning curve imo.
All taken with basically no sunlight, went to the Culver steps after sunset and messed around
Not used to it at all; please be kind
Goddamnit the last one is so slanted, I should use the grid feature to fix that.
Used the 55-210mm lens; will probably try the kit lens tomorrow and see how it is.
I think I stated a few pages back about wanting to pick one up (mainly to use at music festivals, sporting events, and concerts since a lot of venues will not allow anything that looks like a "DSLR" inside).......I can live with the learning curve, just curious about your thoughts on ISO performance?
Also slants can be fixed in Lightroom, although there will be some cropping when you angle it off. Considering you just made the purchase I dig the composition.
Use a tripod next timeFirst time shooting with the Sony A6000, huge learning curve imo.
All taken with basically no sunlight, went to the Culver steps after sunset and messed around
Not used to it at all; please be kind
Goddamnit the last one is so slanted, I should use the grid feature to fix that.
Used the 55-210mm lens; will probably try the kit lens tomorrow and see how it is.
is it good to always shoot RAW? or should i shoot both in RAW and JPEG? just realized flickr doesn't allow RAW
Is that your pic? Way too dope. How'd it come out so crisp?
Is that your pic? Way too dope. How'd it come out so crisp?
you can just Export your pics as a jpeg fileis it good to always shoot RAW? or should i shoot both in RAW and JPEG? just realized flickr doesn't allow RAW
Bruh. I'm just a noob as you can tell by my pictures lol.
Oops, my bad if I got a little too technical. Long story short, a bunch of things come into play when you're trying to get a sharp image.
Just out of curiousity, what mode do you shoot in?
Nah you don't got to dumb it down all the way lmao. I'll pick up eventually. I know ISO is basically the focus. Still not sure about the shutter speed and how to use that yet.
Mainly portrait, landscape and close up are my gotos at the moment.
ISO is the level of sensitivity of your camera to available light. Basically you use it if you need to get more light but your photos result with more noise. Check out the link below.
https://photographylife.com/what-is-iso-in-photography
Eventually you will learn when and when not to use high ISO. Like some basic rules of thumb is when shooting action or motion and you want to freeze subject matters, use a higher ISO. If you are shooting a long exposure, always try and shoot with a lower ISO. My advice is just to shoot more and the more trial and error you get, the more questions will pop up and the more you will seek answers.
Nah you don't got to dumb it down all the way lmao. I'll pick up eventually. I know ISO is basically the focus. Still not sure about the shutter speed and how to use that yet.
Mainly portrait, landscape and close up are my gotos at the moment.
Nah you don't got to dumb it down all the way lmao. I'll pick up eventually. I know ISO is basically the focus. Still not sure about the shutter speed and how to use that yet.
Mainly portrait, landscape and close up are my gotos at the moment.
you can just Export your pics as a jpeg file
Any tips on what I've already posted?