seeds for next summer.
Reijo
This is a discussion on maplekeys within the Critiques forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; seeds for next summer. Reijo...
seeds for next summer.
Reijo
good
-nice natural colors
-exposure is right on
-nice DOF
-good contrast
nit
-comp. to much negative space (try cropping off the bottom of the photo
up to the bottom of the seeds, leave a little space there
-seeds are soft (use a tripod and self timer or use a faster shutter speed)
Take care,
Dwayne Oakes
"When I slow my walk, open my eyes and listen,
nature reveals her hidden beauty to me." Dwayne Oakes
http://dwayne-oakes.artistwebsites.com/
Dwayne is bang-on.
For me, the most distracting element is all that snow at the bottom stealing the show. I'd likely crop out the bottom 3rd of this photo which will define the focal point. Hope that helps! Marko
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Hi reijo
Try f8 or f11 should work well. But everything in photography is a trade
off as you use higher aperture f stops the background will start to come
into focus. Check to see if your camera has a depth of field preview button.
My Nikon D80 has one which when pressed you will be able to see how
much of your subject is in focus and then you can adjust your aperture f stops
if necessary.
Speaking of trade offs once you start using the higher aperture f stops
it will drop your shutter speeds low so use a tripod with the self timer
and on a calm day. Also shoot in A mode (aperture priority) as this mode
will give you full control of your lens aperture f settings. Hope this helps.
Take care,
Dwayne Oakes
Last edited by Dwayne Oakes; 12-22-2008 at 12:40 AM.
"When I slow my walk, open my eyes and listen,
nature reveals her hidden beauty to me." Dwayne Oakes
http://dwayne-oakes.artistwebsites.com/
As I understand it, when you look through the viewfinder, you *always* see the scene from the lenses' maximum aperture. So, if your camera was for example set to F11 and you were using an F2.8 lens, the viewfinder would show the scene at F2.8 - it's only when the picture is taken that you get an F11 picture.
*So*, the depth preview button stops down the viewfinder to the aperture setting you have selected (one of the reasons the viewfinder gets darker if you are shooting with a closed down aperture) and you can preview the depth of field correctly through the viewfinder.
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