Bcool,
There's no need for apologies. I am very much an amateur. Still got a lot to learn. If anything about your shot it's nice you captured the old man's mood. Perhaps it is not sharp enough so that the wrinkles shows clearlyI am being an armchair critics here... haha; in practice I probably wouldn't be able to produce it myself. Maybe the expert here can input; is it camera shake? If aperture were set higher may be better result?
Setting 1/60 of a second on my old hands is tough. Just joking eh but agak agak 30 yrs old 1/60 40 yrs old 1/80 50 yrs old 1/100 60 yrs old 1/125?
Seriously though my opinion is that apart from blur its a good portrait.
Hi Bcool, welcome to CH. Nice picture you got. Would be better, like what others said, if it's sharper. Another thing is that it's too tightly cropped. Just my 0.02 cts only.![]()
Nice shot though it lacks sharpness. Was it movement, shake or the lens issue? Anyway, the softness gives a pleasing photo.
Cheers
I'm 50+ and retired and should therefore put myself into the "count me in" list.
ISO800, 20mm F2.8 1/8s KM7D hand held.
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Picture was shot in Datong, Shanxi inside the famous wooden pagoda. The camera's anti-shake feature is very useful for "older hands" :bsmilie:
Would love to join like minded photographers on leisurely trips to interesting places.
Hi jay.....I like the softness too. This probably was caused by handshake. Old man got shaky hands lah.:bsmilie:
It is the Sakyamuni statue, just inside the main entrance of the wooden pagoda (about 900 years old). See this link for more info: http://www.travelchinaguide.com/attraction/shanxi/datong/wooden_pagoda.htm
The picture was originally in RAW format. Then applied a little magic with Silkypix Pro raw processor. PS used only to reduce picture size for the web posting.
Thank you dogcom for your kind words. If I can remember it was a grab shot. The old man was passing by where I was standing and I just put up my camera and pressed the shutter.
It was in the evening and the light was fading which account for the low shutter speed.
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Well, one reason is that maybe he was moving too fast, and 1/60 is still slow to freeze motion ... although still good for handheld use, unless you were really in a hurry to hold it relatively steady.
Looking beyond the sharpness, however, it's not too bad. A less tighter crop would probably show him in movement, then it would be probably be better.
Hi Clubgrit....No, the old man was not moving fast. It was me with my wobbly hands that contributed to the blurness.and thanks for your suggestion....will keep that in mind if I decide to try portrait shooting in the streets again.
PS.....I was going thru some of your works in the forum and gotta to say that you are rather nifty and talented with that 'ancient camera' of yours:bsmilie:
and I kinda like these two
http://www.photofilma.com/images/sos-070217-1_MED.jpg
http://www.photofilma.com/images/sos-070217-2_MED.jpg
Hope you don't mind me linking them here.
rgds
Wow, thanks Bcool for highlighting the works of Clubgrit. I am astounded by the pictures. Hope we can organise an outing soon and hope to pick up some tips from the experienced photographers. There are so many thing that I wish to learn. Let's start maybe at a old coffee shop in an old district. Can have coffee, talk photography and perhaps take some pictures while there;p