Why not just title the thread Rich, Kawi, and Chili then? :pOkiewan said:I know average Joe thinks a pic is bad if the whole bike insn't in the image so I won't bother asking him :p
Yeah, I know there were a few names I left out, and no disrespect was intended to them.Okiewan said:Rich, Chili, Kawi, Squid, Will, Lou. :p
There is a difference in the way people that look at photographs. Most, just look to see how good the action is. If the focus is good enough = "good shot". Photogs look at that plus the technical aspects of the image .... exposure, crop, sharpness, DOF, light, etc. etc.
Sooo... if you are looking for answers to technical aspects, who you gonna ask? ;)
I am ASSuming that was meant for me. Any good tips to overcome the shaky thing then, or is this just for attack purposes only?Okiewan said:First step is to get some pics in focus and without camera shake. [ rolls eyes ]
You didn't see my smilie?Green Horn said:I am ASSuming that was meant for me. Any good tips to overcome the shaky thing then, or is this just for attack purposes only?
Thanks, I was thinking it was a shutter speed issue...mostly. I didn't know of the shutter speed vs. zoom rule. I will have to play around with that. :cool:Okiewan said:You didn't see my smilie?
Avoiding camera shake.
1. Use a tripod.
or
2. Make sure your shutter speed is faster than the lens (or zoom) you are shooting. Ie; if you are shooting at 70mm, shutter speed needs to be at LEAST 1/80th. Since this rule came to be during the film days, on a 20D you should make it (70x1.6 (crop factor)=112) 1/125th.
Uh oh, is that another no-no in the photog world? :bang: :laugh:Okiewan said:but dude, you blew it up :)
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