- 8,443
- 2,143
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
@khankussionz
- Just everyday photography and people when i go out to family events. I just got it in today and played around with it. That bokeh is crazy.
if you are saying that a 50mm on a crop is versatile, I would argue that. 80 is not versatile IMO.I think it's a versatile lens even on a crop body. It's my go-to. I had the 35mm but it was too wide so I had to be right on top of my subject and hated it. The 50mm allows me to take a step back and get a great shallow depth of field. I shoot my portraits with an 85mm which is around 123mm on a crop sensor so I know that when I switch to a full frame that I will be looking into the 70-200mm.
if you are saying that a 50mm on a crop is versatile, I would argue that. 80 is not versatile IMO.
sick shot fam!
Manual or death, I told myself when I first got my hands on a DSLR that I wouldn't shoot on any other mode and that's what I did and that's how I learned....why buy a DSLR to use it as a pointNshoot?
Lmaoooooooooooo bruh!!!! That bull was going IN
Manual or death, I told myself when I first got my hands on a DSLR that I wouldn't shoot on any other mode and that's what I did and that's how I learned....why buy a DSLR to use it as a pointNshoot?
I think anyone that truly wants to understand exposure should know how to shoot in manual mode.
[COLOR=#red]Here's the pic I was talking about. Could have been so much better, but it happened so fast not to mention that I had to shoot through the windshield because they were actually moving while humping . [/COLOR]
because a dslr generally takes waaaaay better pictures? the camera for most is a means to an end, manual just gives you more control to get the desired image...if shooting in an auto mode can get the image that you want; why switch to manual?
agreed, i'd actually like to shoot in auto modes more but since most of my favorite lenses right now are manual and i haven't quite figured out a mode that will get the iso & shutter speed right for me, so manual is where i leave my cameras set by default; its funny how much autofocus is so good now, in most situations, it is almost a given now, maybe automatic modes will soon reach that level as well?
ha! gotta put the camera right on the glass or at least parallel to whatever you're shooting through to minimize the glare
Bro using a DSLR to shoot in Auto is an absolute waste of money...plenty of great P&S's that will warrant amazing pics, hell I even follow some dudes on IG doing absolute damage with an iPhone.
You get a DSLR to explore the full control of the camera, not to get the best image, is the photographer that creates the shot, not the camera bro.