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The Power of Nikon CoolPix 775 Camera
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wow, those are some pretty sweet pics!
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Can an S200 do those kinds of pics? What are the settings needed? Canon pro's help!
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Quote:
Originally posted by Weapon_R
Can an S200 do those kinds of pics? What are the settings needed? Canon pro's help!
its simpo. set your exposure time to something insanely long.
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it should look like that on auto mode w/ the flash off.
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I think the nikons have a moving setting, if you ficus on another moving car thats travelling at the same spped the car will come out but the background will be trippy. see if your camera has this setting. lots of fun.
Laurier
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Quote:
Originally posted by Weapon_R
Can an S200 do those kinds of pics? What are the settings needed? Canon pro's help!
Yes.
Manual.
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Quote:
Originally posted by Jeff TYPE R
its simpo. set your exposure time to something insanely long.
how do i set my exposure time???
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Quote:
Originally posted by lammer
how do i set my exposure time???
What kind of camera do you have, some dont have that as an option
My cam will do anything from 1/1500th of a second exposure, all the way to 15 second exposure
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a sony cybershot/? damn i hope mine has one.
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damn, i wanted to take some funky pictures.
I like those kinds that youguys made.
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Quote:
Originally posted by Benny
Yes.
Manual.
:rofl: :rofl: That brought a smile!
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is this what exposure time means??
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Exposure Compensation is the ability to override the cameras metered exposure by a preset value normally in the range of -2 to +2 EV in 0.3 EV steps. For instance if your camera metered a scene at 1/60s F5.6 (11 EV) and you had an exposure compensation of +0.7 EV it would actually take the shot with an exposure of 1/40s F5.6 (10.3 EV), yes inverse of what you'd expected but it would be even more confusing for +VE to produce darker images and -VE to produce lighter images. See also exposure, metering.
This is useful once you understand your cameras metering system and where and when you should override it. For example most Pro's recommend using at least -0.3 or -0.7 EV compensation for over-the-shoulder bright sunlight shots and +0.7 or +1.0 EV compensation for strongly back-lit shots.
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The shutter speed is the length of time the "shutter" which covers the CCD allows light onto the CCD, in older digital cameras this was an electronic shutter (electronically start and stop recording light), now being replaced by more traditional mechanical shutters (explanation below).
A shutter speed of 1/125s means that the sensor is exposed to light for 1/125s, the resulting light levels (which are output as voltages by the sensor) are recorded for each pixel of the image. Most people can hold a camera still enough not to get shake at shutter speeds of 1/60s and above, below that speed a tripod, monopod, physical object or optical stabilisation. Most prosumer digital cameras have a fairly wide range of shutter speeds from relatively long (8/16 seconds) up to about 1/1500 sec. Some prosumer cameras provide shutter priority exposure modes.
Typically if you're taking photographs where you need to "freeze" the action you'll need a shutter speed of 1/250s. To avoid shake you should always have shutter speed faster than the focal length of the lens (or current zoom) in mm, for example a 300mm lens would need a shutter speed of 1/300s to avoid blurring (due to camera shake).
or is that it.
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