cmcadams
Quintessential Chatty Farker
I'm working with a photographer to get some tips for food photography... And I was wondering, if you're interested in taking better food photographs, how you'd like to get the info...
Ask if he can help the "point and shoot" people! You know the ones that use the "A" mod.?:icon_blush:
Keale, it's a she, but she can help with that, too... I use a P&S right now, though I hope to upgrade... There are other settings than 'Auto', but the way.
I know a lot of what we've talked about so far is helping set up better lighting and composition more than just saying to buy a good camera... that's not going to help if I don't know how to take a picture at all.
Rick, 'tain't happenin'! She's not local.
quote]
does she have a webcam?
Rick, 'tain't happenin'! She's not local.
quote]
does she have a webcam?
This is in Q-Talk, NOT Woodpile!
LM & Keale, thanks... The second was after a lot of help figuring out how to take the shot, though I still have a long way to go.
Thirdeye... Maybe we can get the admins to start a new section for photo critiques!
Rick, 'tain't happenin'! She's not local.
JD, the 'A' mode on my P&S is for aperture priority, which I actually use a lot.
He said taint! :biggrin:Rick, 'tain't happenin'! She's not local.
JD, the 'A' mode on my P&S is for aperture priority, which I actually use a lot.
then he said this isn't the woodpile! :biggrin:He said taint! :biggrin:
You might wanna ping Thawley on this conversation. He's a photography instructor.
Here's a few of my own tips (in text, no photos)
Invest in a tripod. Keeping your camera steady will improve your photos guaranteed. Especially true for indoor still life type photos. Doesn't need to buy an expensive one, either, but it should be stable enough for the size / weight of your camera.
Light your subject as well as you can. If that means turning on room lights, opening drapes for indoor shots, do that. If you're outdoors, sometimes you have the opposite problem and you have too much harsh sunlight creating harsh shadows. Sometimes, shooting outdoors means taking your subject out of direct sunlight.
Learn how to use your flash modes. It's usually AUTO mode, and the camera will decide when the flash goes off. For indoor shots, that's often not wanted, so force the flash OFF. For outdoor shots in harsh sunlight, you want to use "fill flash" to soften the harsh shadows on your subject, so force flash to the ON mode.
Learn about white balance. Shooting under fluorescent light gives your photos a greenish blue tint. Shooting under halogen light gives it an orange tone. Your camera has settings to compensate for these light conditions so your whites show up white, not blue or orange. Even basic digicams have some sort of white balance feature, and it's well worth using.