melnjes said:
TMC is right.
ISO, aperture, shutter speed, etc are all interlinked in getting the exposure to what you want. E.g. why did you set the ISO to 250 and not 200? Why not adjust shutter speed instead? What if you change the aperture? What is the effect of changing the aperture? In the first place, do you know what exposure is? You need to be able to answer these qns. You seem to have gone through a roundabout to get the exposure you wanted. It looks like you haven't gotten the basics right, but yet you are trying more and more new things.
Since you've taken the step to get a DSLR, you'd owe it to yourself and your equipment to understand the concepts, otherwise a point-and-shoot would be better. Log on less often lah, then you will have time to read and practice, don't say you don't have time! Talk less, listen more.
P.S. I'm amazed at how a day-old thread can generate so many views and responses! :bsmilie:
amen to dat.
no one (well.. not every one, anyway) purposely go out of their way to pick on some body, unless of course one asked for it. wat i noticed for u is dat u are quite obessed early on knowing THE setting to get THE best pic (judging from the way u ask questions on other people's thread). and, dats despite people telling u there's no THE setting. there's a setting for every reason and a reason for every setting. also, as someone pointed out earlier, u dug urself into a bigger hole by offering ur advice when u (to be frank) dunno wat u are saying. the big hoohah over the VR lens is a good example, of which i'm the one who 'slam' u over it (of which u asked me to improve my PR skills, IIRC). not to say i'm right. but, i think u'll understand by now, dat was one of the mildest comment anyone could have said to u.
dun go blaming every one else for ur current predicament. and dat includes pouring out ur 'woes' on photographersg.org. as u can see, many of CSers are also members of other forum boards. u might get sympathy from there. then again, not all those who sayang u meant well. dat goes for here online and in the real world. (caveat - i've
nothing against people on photographersg.org. in fact, i met 1-2 of them b4 and they are a pretty good bunch of people.) u can say u 'understand' the point of view, and 'change' ur mindset HERE. however, by complaining somewhere else at the same time... well...
and, pls. dun go round muttering that u'll quit CS just becos people are out to pick on u. it gets tiresome after a while. and frankly, i believe no one really cares whoever quits. remember. this is an online forum. people come and people go. also, dun think every one got a bone to pick with u. the more u think like dat, and it will become a self-fulfilling prophecy. everyone (from the mods to the peons in CS) gets 'slammed' for wat is perceived to be a lousy pic. impt thing is to keep quiet and listen. even the harshest and crappiest of comments can contain a kernel of truth.
oh, here's a tip. a senior CSer once told me in my early days of joining CS. the people who post here, by and large, dun post their best pics for critique. makes sense, doesn't it. and, by and large, i found this to be true once i got to meet the really good shooters. think abt it. wats the point of posting the best pics and learn nothing, rite? (unless dat shooter is blardy egoistical, which, IMO, is quite rare among the CSers i've met so far) so, for those who like to comment dat the pic is 'best'... heehee.. u ain't see nothing yet. if one has a chance to meet any of the really good shooters, ask them to show their portfolio. i guarantee u dat their portfolio of un-posted pics will blow u away.
bottom line - shoot more and learn (from manuals, books, real pros, classes etc...). dun moan. as the saying goes, if u can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.