This is at 35mm and f/4.5 on a full frame body. On a cropper you would only need 22mm and f/2.8 for an equivalent composition and DOF.
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Love the little guy on the left lol.

This is at 35mm and f/4.5 on a full frame body. On a cropper you would only need 22mm and f/2.8 for an equivalent composition and DOF.
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OMG, how many times can you say "properly" in one sentence. I'm well educated - honest!

Re. the 500D - seriously, straight up - is it a camera I could start off using for paid for work? (if I cracked my demons of course).
You mention you had to "raise the exposure a bit" in PP. That is the very best way to increase noise - trust me, I use Olympus!It's important for this type of shot to get the exposusre right in camera. I see from the Exif that you set -2 stops flash compensation. That's OK outdoors when you want just a little fill in but why indoors when it is your main light source? Also, I'm not too sure how using spot metering affects Evaluative TTL flash, perhaps an experienced Canon user can explain, but to me it doesn't sound a good idea. What part of the scene was you spot metering?
I bet the histogram on the original is bunched to the left. You really need to expose to the right as far as you can without actually clipping the highlights, then you will find far less noise in the shadows.![]()
Finally, Lightroom 3 can finish the work really nicely. I have yet to see another nearly as good RAW converter.
thanks so much folksI literally just ran through as I'd remembered I hadn't thanked/commented on Rich's edit of the image, so Rich, thanks, it looks good I think.
But just a bit of food for thought.
Also, bride has asked for 4-5 shots of her and groom only to use as thank you postcards. I've got some lovely on the beach shotsI'll post one of the edits once they're done so you can see the whole thing wasn't a complete disaster
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Here's a very extreme example of how you can adjust the mix of ambient light vs flash. This was all accomplished by changing nothing except shutter speed. I can easily go from making the room look pitch black, all the way to being correctly exposed, while at the same time keeping my subject correctly exposed at all times. Note that as I raise the ambient exposure, by slowing the shutter speed, the harsh shadows begin to be lifted from the subject and the room comes alive.
Now this is obviously a very artificial setup, but with only a small room to play in I had a problem to put enough distance between the flash and the background compared to the flash with the subject. In a larger environment the results would be different. The important thing to understand is how to balance ambient vs flash vs IQ vs blur vs noise vs your aesthetic goals. Setting an exposure that pretty much kills the ambient light dead is probably not the best option.
Tim, I noticed you were shooting at such low shutter speeds, would this be ok with a human subject? Obviously this would need to be on a tripod but Can you get away with shooting a human subject at 0.4? would the results still be sharp - i would imagine there would be tiny movements at that speed?
what are the furry edges?
You simply need to buy yourself some better glass.
I recently bought a canon 200mm f2.8 L series and the difference blew me away.
Invest in better glass, you won't be disappointed.
When you drag the shutter (use a low shutter speed in order to suck in sufficient ambient light) the flash duration is so short that the flash part of the exposure should freeze the subject, but if you have a significant amount of ambient light added in over an extended period of time you can see blur from the ambient part of the exposure. This can lead to a sharpish looking subject but with the edges looking messed up where bits of background bleed through if the subject moves.
I'd say that for shooting candids of people standing around you should aim for a shutter speed of not less than 1/60 if you want the ambient light to feature significantly in the exposure and avoid excessive "fuzziness". It's not that you can't shoot at slower speeds, but your keeper rate might start to diminish. Of course, if people are posing and can keep still then you can go slower, so long as you keep the camera/lens steady. A tripod is a lovely idea, but often impractical, which is where IS lenses come into their own.
I have seen this recently and wondered the cause. thanks for the explanation -so the flash literally freezes the subject on the sensor - how does that even work?
Look up examples of "2nd curtain sync". It is a technique for making the flash fire at the end of a (long) exposure and can be used to create a trailing blur effect for a moving subject which leads up to a sharp and solid subject at the end of the trail.well well well, i always heard about flash freezing the motion but I didn't realise it was as dramatic as that.
A gentleman would never discuss such matters. The answer is "Yes."is that woman using the sparkler to hide her boob?
thanks everyone
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Hoppy, thanks for your reply. I do tend to expose to the right always, but as I've said, I don't yet know how to do this with flash on board. Sorry you think the composition is bad, I didn't have much choice. I was back as far as I could go, my lens as wide as it goes. Nothing much more I could do. The group was arranged by a good friend who's been doing photography for years, he wanted to help me. He also advised no tripod when I started to put it up. I should have been more assertive. I know the composition and group formation isn't great but as a) my friend told me not to worry, it didn't have to be perfect (I was SO nervous, didn't let on to her) and b) it was done for free, I'm not going to give myself yet more of a hard time over that. I do appreciate your comments are to help me learn though so I'm not being snotty, just describing the situation. I know I would get more experience if I didn't have someone helping me with group formations (the same problem I had in my first freebie wedding, the one on FB, where the subjects were all looking at the girl they knew who was "helping" me to get them organised then snapping too).
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