Cagey75
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Yes today Alan ,53 years working,44 in same barber shop
Happy retirement!
Yes today Alan ,53 years working,44 in same barber shop
What do you mean? It looks like any other backlit photo where you up the exposure compensation by a stop or 2.
How come then the shadows from the glasses and ears and the highlights in ear and on said glasses. Phil said glassurface of building which may be true. Still its not quite an example of DR if shadows has been filled one way or the other.What do you mean? It looks like any other backlit photo where you up the exposure compensation by a stop or 2.
How come then the shadows from the glasses and ears and the highlights in ear and on said glasses. Phil said glassurface of building which may be true. Still its not quite an example of DR if shadows has been filled one way or the other.
CheersHappy retirement!
Sorry Raymond, but there are quite distinct shadows showing a ‘light source’ camera left.The sun is low enough, it clips on on top of that building, this looks normal enough. It reminds me when I shot a wedding portrait on my 5D2 with the sun through the trees behind them with no fill and no flash and people said I lied and I must've used a flash. My experience is that golden hour give you even light, even when shot towards it, especially when the sun is clipping, all you need is exposure compensate it a little.
Sorry Raymond, but there are quite distinct shadows showing a ‘light source’ camera left.
Now it’s almost certainly the sun reflected in a window, but it’s not a backlit image with the shadows lifted in post.
The only thing that creates shadows like that is a point light source, simple physics.
Sorry Raymond, but there are quite distinct shadows showing a ‘light source’ camera left.
Now it’s almost certainly the sun reflected in a window, but it’s not a backlit image with the shadows lifted in post.
The only thing that creates shadows like that is a point light source, simple physics.
I’ve not seen your image,and I really don’t think it’s relevant, but I’ve spent 30 years lighting photos. And quite simply the shadows on their faces could not have been made just by the backlight. Light doesn’t bend until you get close to a black hole.That's what people accused me of, literally said I was lying when there was no light source from the camera's direction when I took mine.
You can’t see the shadows of the arms of the glasses?I'm not seeing anything obvious in either of their glasses - what am I missing? Wouldn't a reflector or flash or constant light show up like a sore thumb?
this is what we're looking at right?
http://www.rossharvey.com/images/22806.jpg
I’ve not seen your image,and I really don’t think it’s relevant, but I’ve spent 30 years lighting photos. And quite simply the shadows on their faces could not have been made just by the backlight. Light doesn’t bend until you get close to a black hole.
You can’t see the shadows of the arms of the glasses?
Jeez!
You can’t see the shadows of the arms of the glasses?
Jeez!
Uhhmm maybe though I can't quite get the angles to fit.I think the photo was taken here, circled. The line is the edge of the building which would be behind the camera, and that looks like corner of a building which would be your reflector. There's your shadow explained.
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ThanksThere are more light than just behind them, the floor, who knows, Ross could be wearing a white T-shirt, exposure compensate it 2 stop will bump it up. The sky is completely blown, the photo he took in the same area that is more balanced in exposure clearly shows a blue sky, with same sun clipping the same building. You are not bending light, you are adding more simply by upping the exposure compensation.
"to be one of the only people in the world to shoot with the Z7 pre-release (and the first person in Europe to even see it in person)"
I can't stand this sort of willy waving, it serves no purpose for the review. The rest of it kinda reads like somebody who has never experienced an a7RIII, as the majority of early impressions from those who use/test multiple systems regularly are not as complimentary about AF.
If this is a genuine question...I can but, wouldn't they create darker shadows regardless? If you bumped shadows in post, even way up, if the glasses had deeper shadows, they're still going to show no? unless you clone them out! I would have thought it was cast by the very reflective windows behind them [as Ray just said]
Why the Jeez!? I'm being genuine hereI like to learn y'know!
So, you agree with me now, having had a proper think.I think the photo was taken here, circled. The line is the edge of the building which would be behind the camera, and that looks like corner of a building which would be your reflector. There's your shadow explained.
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Nikon ambassador saying he’s not a Nikon puppet and will give an honest review yet is the only person to praise AF and say the camera is a revelation??? Who’s he trying to kid? Reading by the responses a lot have bought it hook line and sinker![]()
I think every non-biased review (ie not rossharvey's) shows that the Z's are not at the races no matter what you're comparing it to in that price range.Honestly though DPR'a judgement seems based mostly on "it doesn't handle just like a Nikon DSLR" rather than judging it against Sony.
Some of Ross' shots feature the same people across a number of shots. While I'm not calling him dishonest and some of the shots are superb, it's probably a bit misleading to call his z7 shoot 'Street photography.'
So, you agree with me now, having had a proper think.![]()
"to be one of the only people in the world to shoot with the Z7 pre-release (and the first person in Europe to even see it in person)"
I can't stand this sort of willy waving, it serves no purpose for the review. The rest of it kinda reads like somebody who has never experienced an a7RIII, as the majority of early impressions from those who use/test multiple systems regularly are not as complimentary about AF.
Oh s,,,,t .i often just lick them then spit out then eat straight from the bush,hmm,might do the salt jobby
Thought the conversation had gone back to Chelsea Northrup for a minute![]()

Think Chelsea is more exciting tbhNow, about those new Nikon cameras...
My missus does look when I am typing sometimes but she doesn't care lolI'm glad that partners don't come here, you're all Very naughty boys![]()
If this is a genuine question...
The strength of a shadow is the ratio between sources, usually outside the difference between the light source and fill.
A typical example being on a bright sunny day (blue sky) the sun is a point light source so it creates hard shadows, when there’s cloud cover, the whole sky becomes a soft light source, so no shadows, there’s many variables in between. When shooting ‘ordinary’ people we ‘generally’ want softer light, so we avoid bright sunny days, dive into open shade etc.
this particular image is a complex scene, backlit so the couple are in a shadow, but then the 2nd ‘light source’* is filling that shadow, a ‘brighter’ source would create deeper shadows, a bigger source creates softer shadows. Because the whole of the shadow area may have been lifted in post, it’s impossible to guess the actual strength of that light source.
Back in the mists of time, when I was trained in lighting, the key message was to learn how to read light, because if we can read lighting, we can reverse engineer it. Copying other images is more about light than composition, you may already know some of that.
And for info ‘Grandad’s iPad died as he started writing the reply to Raymond, so he went to bed, but he’s not a grandad till next month
*A light source could be a reflector, flash, continuous light etc
My missus does look when I am typing sometimes but she doesn't care lol