ukaskew
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 3,839
- Name
- Chris
- Edit My Images
- Yes
I read an interesting blog by a wedding photographer yesterday, for their own wedding they didn't employ a photographer, they just set up their own cameras and told people to hand them around and shoot whatever. The results were superb from the selection I've seen, it was obviously a brave choice but they were very happy with the results, so it paid off. Of course they had out of focus photos and all sorts of odd things, but there is no way of legislating for everything.
That got me thinking, is it possible to set up a DSLR to the point where anyone can pick it up and potentially take a reasonably competent photo? I own a 5Dc so I'm well out of touch with what a modern body is capable of, but could you...
- Set an aperture (say, f2.8 on a 35mm 1.4, for arguments sake).
- Tell the camera to shoot at base ISO if shutter speed is within a set parameter, but push it up to a maximum pre-defined ISO if needs be (say, ISO6400).
I'm not for a second suggesting wedding photography is that straightforward, I'm just wondering if you decided to approach your big day from that angle, could you put your kit in a position to maximise the chance of getting good photos in a relatively fool proof way? With the high ISO performance available now I would guess it's more possible than it's ever been.
That got me thinking, is it possible to set up a DSLR to the point where anyone can pick it up and potentially take a reasonably competent photo? I own a 5Dc so I'm well out of touch with what a modern body is capable of, but could you...
- Set an aperture (say, f2.8 on a 35mm 1.4, for arguments sake).
- Tell the camera to shoot at base ISO if shutter speed is within a set parameter, but push it up to a maximum pre-defined ISO if needs be (say, ISO6400).
I'm not for a second suggesting wedding photography is that straightforward, I'm just wondering if you decided to approach your big day from that angle, could you put your kit in a position to maximise the chance of getting good photos in a relatively fool proof way? With the high ISO performance available now I would guess it's more possible than it's ever been.

