Some of these have a very yellow tinge to them. Now I have to learn how to adjust that! They have an interesting look to them too...not sure how I feel about it yet.
The next two photos were taken in the evening using Sepia mode. I love the way they turned out. Now if only that one petal was straightened out!
This photo was taken the next day with natural light. Not as focused/sharp as it should be though. The framing isn't that great either, need to remember to pay more attention to that!
My camera is a Canon Powershot a630 and while I love it, it doesn't have all the benefits of a pro or semi-pro camera so I'm a little limited in that. For instance, a question for those of you with DSLR cameras; does having different lens (50mm or other) make a difference in getting the "bokeh" (the out-of-focus/blurry background stuff) effect? So far, I've only really been able to get that in macro mode. Even when I have the camera set to the widest aperture (2.8) I still can't get the dramatic focus/out-of-focus looks...
If you have any suggestions, I'd love to hear them. I've been reading some of the tutorials from PioneerWoman Photography but I've still got a lot to learn! :)
2 comments:
Lovely flower pictures! I have a Powershot A570, which is very similar to your camera. I'd love a DSLR, but I don't think I'd carry it often; portability is important to me. Trade-offs, what to do.
I found myself standing in a waterfall pool yesterday, trying to remember how to shoot in the different manual modes. Finally gave up and just took snaps of the kids. Time to get the manual out again. I know how to do all those things with my film SLR, but I never carry that with me, either!
Wow! Photography is one of those things I'd really love to learn (but of course, that list is so long, I end up living vicariously through others). So I thank you for this post! It's inspired me to go home and play with my point and shoot digital :)
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