welder122803 Member 44 posts Joined Feb 2007 More info | Mar 10, 2007 06:27 | #1
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Mar 10, 2007 06:28 | #2
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Mar 10, 2007 06:28 | #3
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Mar 10, 2007 06:29 | #4
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Mar 10, 2007 06:29 | #5
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Mar 10, 2007 06:29 | #6
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Mar 10, 2007 06:30 | #7
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joshandlauri Member 245 posts Joined Jan 2007 More info | Mar 10, 2007 08:10 | #8 I cant pull exif, some look real sharp and some are a bit off (long exposure, handheld, I guess). last 2 look the best. I need to find waterfalls and try the stuff out also. Canon 350/xt ,50mm 1.8, Sigma 17-70mm, Sigma 70-300mm DG Macro, Sigma Super Flash Canon Backpack, Ebay tubes (awesome), Cheap tripod and a Sony DSC-S40 and a lot of hope and dreams of more gear.
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MrBSnappy Senior Member 400 posts Joined Oct 2006 Location: Norfolk - UK More info | Mar 10, 2007 13:32 | #9 Other than several of them not being sharp I'm finding a lot of the debris (twigs mainly) distracting, especially the big one in the forground of number 4. Maybe move some of them next time. No matter how much you learn, there's always someone who knows more.
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kevie Senior Member 262 posts Joined Feb 2007 Location: San Marcos Cali More info | Mar 10, 2007 16:24 | #10 on 3 and 4 the composition is a lil better than the others and i would say if you really want good waterfall type shots use a tripod and really push the envelop on the long exposures. Maybe try a different time of day like just after the sun is gone but its still light out or early morning right before the sun comes up. Yeah the branches/twigs in your scenes really hurt your photos more than help. 30D - 70-200mm f4 L + 17-40mm f4 L + 50mm f1.8 + 2x Sigma 530 super + Kata R-103
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Mar 10, 2007 18:07 | #11 well thank you all for you input i will really take it in to consideration if i go back there, as for a tripod im not sure if i can use one there its really hard to get there and if u could see where i was standing to take the pics i did you would understand but i do apreciate the help
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Mike2005 Member 108 posts Joined Apr 2005 More info | Mar 10, 2007 18:15 | #12 welder122803 wrote in post #2849530 well thank you all for you input i will really take it in to consideration if i go back there, as for a tripod im not sure if i can use one there its really hard to get there and if u could see where i was standing to take the pics i did you would understand but i do apreciate the help I do alot of hiking/backpacking. Carrying around a tripod is annoying at best, unless you can afford one of those carbon fiber ones. I think they are the ones that are ultra light. But when in the backcountry, you can use nature to build a tripod. I usually stack a bunch of large rocks, get the shot, and then disperse the rocks as they were, to conform to low impact standards. I think the composition of #3 is the best. I think these types of photos are better suited at wider angles to provide more context to the scene. 20D
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kato1 Goldmember 1,093 posts Likes: 1 Joined Nov 2006 Location: England More info | Mar 11, 2007 15:07 | #13 Try using a ND filter. This will allow the water to blur more as the shutter will remain open longer to give the correct exposure. EOS 40D + BG-E2N, EOS 10D + BG-ED3,
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GrumpsPhoto Suffering Keyboard in Mouth desease 2,012 posts Likes: 25 Joined Oct 2004 Location: Ottawa, Canada More info | Mar 11, 2007 21:09 | #14 The first caught my interests, and I'm wondering if a some exposure adjustment to the raw file might bring out more of the area around the water. Grumps
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tazrebel Member 109 posts Joined Feb 2007 Location: Albuquerque, NM More info | Mar 11, 2007 23:05 | #15 i like these types of phots as well. the last couple looked pretty good. try to remove any distracting debris from the frame when you can. also, for extended exposure use a tripod so that the other pieces of the picture are sharper. Kevin -
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