The Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 is an excellent lens, yet I too feel a little conflicted in its use. As a workhorse, it's always there ready to do what you tell it. It produces outstanding results, rain or shine, but like the other snobs here, I feel I get more out of photography when using primes.Forgot about this place! I have an exam tomorrow, which is probably why I remembered it now...
I was planning to travel but things keep falling through so now I'm looking to (finally) update my gear. Considering a Nikon D600 with a 24-70. The D800 is tasty but an overkill for what I need, and the 24-70 seems like a beautiful workhorse while I save for some primes.
Anyone have any experience or opinions on the D600 and lens suggestions? If something pops up and I can't stretch my budget to the 24-70 what else would you suggest?
VSCO.I'd really like to be able to get the 'look' that this guy does with his photos. I really admire post that is done on his photos especially the ones of the guy cleaning the red car (who happens to be my cousin). What does this photographer do in post to get this look in all of his photos?
http://riskynights.tumblr.com/
Which is essentially all that VSCO is...Nah,
Just curves.
None of that is VSCO, at all. Where'd you even get that from?VSCO.
ten chararcharizards
I'd really like to be able to get the 'look' that this guy does with his photos. I really admire post that is done on his photos especially the ones of the guy cleaning the red car (who happens to be my cousin). What does this photographer do in post to get this look in all of his photos?
http://riskynights.tumblr.com/
Stretched tires on wider rims allow for stiffer side walls (allegedly), less traction, therefor easier to slide, also allows for better fitment and lower ride hight due to tires staying away from the lip of the guard and also the inner guards while on lock if applied to front wheels. Bit of a fad also at the moment.What's with the rims/tyres on that red car? Are the rear tyres way too skinny for the rims or is this some sort new trend?
What is it then?None of that is VSCO, at all. Where'd you even get that from?
check out the yongnuo flashes. look identical to the canon models and are pretty decent. a friend of mine who does a lot of flash/strobe work uses a canon 580 ex ii as his master, and then has 4 yongnuo (i think it's the 565) as slaves.I'm currently shooting with a Canon 550D, and am looking to move up into using remote flash/strobes. Can anyone recommend a good model of trigger & flash on a budget? Mainly looking to shoot for foreground fill when shooting into the sun and sidelight/highlighting flash for low light/dusk shoots.
Prices/review/opinions please!
Thanks
I think you get like 5 uses of it from memory.What is it then?
And if i buy VSCO can i put it on Aperture on my laptop and my desktop? Or have to buy to separate?
Once you have it, you have all the files. Can copy to as many computers as you want.What is it then?
And if i buy VSCO can i put it on Aperture on my laptop and my desktop? Or have to buy to separate?
First thing is slow your shutter speed down. You do not need to be shooting that fast.highjack-ok so i'm new to dslrs and i've picked up a nikon d3100 and done a fair bit of reading through the manual and online about its settings and functions as well as a fair few experimental shots..but i can't seem to get good dh shots in low light(under tree canopies in the bush) it seems like by the time i put the shutter speed and iso up a bit and lower the aperture the photos still come out a bit too dark for my liking..do i just have to bite the bullet and get some flash gear or is there another way around it? at the moment my settings are 1/400 shutter speed, apeture on 4.0 and iso on 1600 ,exposure comp on 2.0,matrix metering and continuous focus...with the vr 18-55 lens..am i at least in the right direction with shooting dh in the shade?