A picture like this
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-use spot metering, aim on the light, do Exposure Lock (consult your camera manual book), then shoot
-I thnk, kiping d xposure of d light which s comin, Wl gve d efect. Or kip shutter to 40, n open d aperture n iso to 320
-Set the aperture to maximum wide as possible. Use lens like 50mm f1.8 and set the aperture between 1.8-2.5 so that more light falls on the sensor. Then boost up ISO if required. More ISO can create noisy pictures and noise will be more visible if you convert the image to black and white.
-Put on your fave high aperture lens (50/ 1.8, 85/ 1.4) set cam body (D700 or 7D) to about 3200-6400 ISO and your shutter to maybe (1/30 - 1/40) sec... You can capture anything as long as you've got something in focus.. You shouldn't have any noise at all?
-ah geez, we are all user, let share what we got, pro or amateur is just matter of definition. if you own DSLR (any dslr), just set mode to Tv/S or Av/A set the metering to spot metering/evaluative metering.
about ISO, please examine the light condition, if the surround is dark ( night time ) you may use higher ISO (iso 800-1600 or 6400).
entry DSLR like EOS 400/550D and Nikon D5000/D5100 has a better grain handling over their predecessor, and grain/noise sometime create a dramatic look :)
happy shooting, shoot many! you'll learn very quick afterward :D
-use spot metering, aim on the light, do Exposure Lock (consult your camera manual book), then shoot
BalasHapus-I thnk, kiping d xposure of d light which s comin, Wl gve d efect. Or kip shutter to 40, n open d aperture n iso to 320
-Set the aperture to maximum wide as possible. Use lens like 50mm f1.8 and set the aperture between 1.8-2.5 so that more light falls on the sensor. Then boost up ISO if required. More ISO can create noisy pictures and noise will be more visible if you convert the image to black and white.
-Put on your fave high aperture lens (50/ 1.8, 85/ 1.4) set cam body (D700 or 7D) to about 3200-6400 ISO and your shutter to maybe (1/30 - 1/40) sec... You can capture anything as long as you've got something in focus.. You shouldn't have any noise at all?
-ah geez, we are all user, let share what we got, pro or amateur is just matter of definition. if you own DSLR (any dslr), just set mode to Tv/S or Av/A set the metering to spot metering/evaluative metering.
about ISO, please examine the light condition, if the surround is dark ( night time ) you may use higher ISO (iso 800-1600 or 6400).
entry DSLR like EOS 400/550D and Nikon D5000/D5100 has a better grain handling over their predecessor, and grain/noise sometime create a dramatic look :)
happy shooting, shoot many! you'll learn very quick afterward :D