More Photos!!

xxdjdinot1989xx

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these are pretty lame as u can see not the best stuff but yeah

i need more ideas on taking photos and different places different effects.etc
any input please say something :)

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my bumper paint is piling off....=(

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i need more ideas on taking photos and different places different effects.etc
any input please say something :)

How about in a smooth shallow puddle of water so you get a good reflection of the car. Some action shots of the car moving might be neat--with the background and wheels blurred from the motion.
Or take it off some sweet jumps :D
 
The boat ramp pics are a sweet idea. A buddy of mine was recently brave enough to take his subaru on the ice... I could never though.
 
How about in a smooth shallow puddle of water so you get a good reflection of the car. Some action shots of the car moving might be neat--with the background and wheels blurred from the motion.
Or take it off some sweet jumps :D

i really do want some action shots of the car moving but im not sure how to take those..i need to google that one day but yeah thanks for reminding me lol and that idea for the jumps ill def think about those :D
 
high speed shutter....good thing that ramp wasn't icy....your making me nervous!:eek:
 
i really do want some action shots of the car moving but im not sure how to take those..i need to google that one day but yeah thanks for reminding me lol and that idea for the jumps ill def think about those :D


You could use either a higher shutter speed/ISO(maybe 1600-2000 range) for a more crisp & LESS blurred image with a MOVING car or at night...

OR...you could use a lower shutter speed/ISO(maybe 50-100 range) for a less crisp & MORE blurred image with a MOVING car...

At any point, you need to know these:

1.) LOWER ISO/Shutter speed = BEST for NON-moving objects & daylight(unless you have a manual SLR):

l_5e1de13a24b0675734c94279b395ad62.png


2.) HIGHER ISO/Shutter speed = BEST for MOVING objects & darker/night conditions:

l_a312edc92d8a0f4902cdfcaf2af195e6.png


IF possible, find out if your camera has a manual/ "M" mode or what is called "bulb" mode, where you can manually adjust how long the shutter is open for.

I had a Nikon D40x(10.2 mega pixels hence the "x" designation) that I LOVED, and these days the lesser model D40(6 mp) can be found for just over $400. There is also the option of using a standard 35mm/film camera...like a Nikon FM-10(appx. $150) or Konica FS-1 and then getting the roll put onto a CD for usually $.99-$2.99 at Walgreens(check for coupons for the $.99 CD option).

At any rate, your BEST bet is to just have fun and experiment LOTS!
 
Good info, but in the end people with point and clicks are f*cked:p
 
Good info, but in the end people with point and clicks are f*cked:p

UNLESS...you have a newer one with a manual bulb mode...which is better than a CCD/point & pray camera without that feature! Of course, a CMOS DSLR is preferred...but hey, since Nikon and others now offer CCD cameras with manual modes AND a flash hotshoe....MAYBE there's hope for photo n00bs?! :rolleyes:
 
I'll stick with software to clean up my n00bish photos.
 
You could use either a higher shutter speed/ISO(maybe 1600-2000 range) for a more crisp & LESS blurred image with a MOVING car or at night...

OR...you could use a lower shutter speed/ISO(maybe 50-100 range) for a less crisp & MORE blurred image with a MOVING car...

At any point, you need to know these:

1.) LOWER ISO/Shutter speed = BEST for NON-moving objects & daylight(unless you have a manual SLR):

l_5e1de13a24b0675734c94279b395ad62.png


2.) HIGHER ISO/Shutter speed = BEST for MOVING objects & darker/night conditions:

l_a312edc92d8a0f4902cdfcaf2af195e6.png


IF possible, find out if your camera has a manual/ "M" mode or what is called "bulb" mode, where you can manually adjust how long the shutter is open for.

I had a Nikon D40x(10.2 mega pixels hence the "x" designation) that I LOVED, and these days the lesser model D40(6 mp) can be found for just over $400. There is also the option of using a standard 35mm/film camera...like a Nikon FM-10(appx. $150) or Konica FS-1 and then getting the roll put onto a CD for usually $.99-$2.99 at Walgreens(check for coupons for the $.99 CD option).

At any rate, your BEST bet is to just have fun and experiment LOTS!

dude i read that all like 3 times but the thing is i don't know anything about (lower shutter speed/ISO).etc anything about taking a photo all i know is to click and its taken lol im more of a graphic designer photoshop type of person

i use a nikon coolpix 4100 idk what effect it does or has or anything about it beside video and taken a regular picture

but thanks for the information
 

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