Konspire said:For a noob like me, its consider amazing alrdy....
Chinese New Year fireworks coming soon. Get your gears ready...!
Konspire said:For a noob like me, its consider amazing alrdy....
Bro those blur 'effect' are caused by depth of field. The distant of the subject, focal length and aperture affects the sharpness of the photo from the focus point. What you see in the pictures have shallow depth of field which low f-stop and long focal length lens were being used.
It can be achieve with almost all lens however the DOF intensity may varies with different lens. Tele, Macro, low f-stop lens may produce nicer and deeper shallow DOF photos.
Nice catch!
This is now commonly called "bokeh."
uma-man said:Registered long time already.. now i got to post something.. hehe owned this camera !!
so, what lens most or u guys having? i want to buy lens, but just too many to choose from.. i currently have the stock and 50mm f/1.8..
Registered long time already.. now i got to post something.. hehe owned this camera !!
so, what lens most or u guys having? i want to buy lens, but just too many to choose from.. i currently have the stock and 50mm f/1.8..
im more to landscape, night light, portrait.. wana try zoom or wide lens?
..
wanna ask u guys....observe the picture below, on the top left n right corner, is this called vignetting? how do we avoid it? cos so far i only got it on my kit lens 18-55 when i zoom out n using landscape mode i think but so far i haven't noticed it in my UWA lens yet 10-20. thxs to enlighten....
im more to landscape, night light, portrait.. wana try zoom or wide lens?
..
Did you use any filter on your lens or did you stack filter or is there anything you put in front of your lens? I don't have such a problem for my 18-55mm...
One at a time bro. Rent a lens if u want to test the lens or test ur interest (in case you dun like it).
UWA is commonly use for landscape but it's not limited to. Also, longer focal range are used at times for landscape as well. Rem, landscape is not abt getting the entire place of what you see into your frame but rather drawing out the beauty of a scene onto your frame. Use UWA when you have strong foreground interest while tighter focal when you want to isolate a feature from afar.
Portrait wise, a 50mm (my preference focal length on APS-C) would be a good start. If its possible, get a 2nd hand AFD version for low cost. Experience the effect of F/1.8, then decide from there.
Nightscape, you will definitely need a tripod. I rem when I was "young", I brought my D90 to boat quay after dark without tripod and shooting auto ISO. Man I was damn disappointed that night with underexposed grainy images. Remember, no filters after dark.
Konspire said:bro, about the "no filters after dark" thingy, how about UV or CPL? is it like more to "No" or "maybe under certain circumstances" kind of rules? thxs....
if i'm not wrong i used UV n CPL filters stacked with each other. that will cause it?
It's better not to have the UV filter on and definitely not with the cpl. The cpl doesn't have much use at night and it reduces the amount of light entering your lens
bro, about the "no filters after dark" thingy, how about UV or CPL? is it like more to "No" or "maybe under certain circumstances" kind of rules? thxs....