Of course!Can I post more pics for y'all to judge, would that be alright?
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Of course!Can I post more pics for y'all to judge, would that be alright?
Fantastic! Thank you.Of course!
Yup. if you can keep the volume down to a couple per post it would help.Can I post more pics for y'all to judge, would that be alright?
I find this one to be a little bit busy on the left side and a little empty on the right, so it visually unbalances the shot. In the future, you can try composing these kinds of backlit sunset images so that your silhouette subject is more isolated to give it more drama. I think mechanically it's fine.
Thank you for that.I like the bokeh rocks in the background. Your Depth of Field is a little back in this shot, your sharpest focal point is to the rear and center of the clump of grasses. If you stop down a couple stops (higher f/stop number) you can open that DoF up and get that whole grass ball into focus. You'll have to increase your exposure time a bit to compensate for the smaller aperture. This will bring some texture into the shot visually and help distinguish your foreground and background. Might also bump the brightness/contrast a bit as well, it's a little on the dark side.
I find this one to be a little bit busy on the left side and a little empty on the right, so it visually unbalances the shot. In the future, you can try composing these kinds of backlit sunset images so that your silhouette subject is more isolated to give it more drama. I think mechanically it's fine.
You need to shoot in either manual or aperture priority. (A or M on the top left wheel as you face the rear of the camera). Then on the right hand side under the on/off toggle (on the front) there's a horizontal rotary dial. In A or M mode, you can change the aperture (f/stop) with that. The display on top will show you the f-stop as well as you will see it when looking through the viewfinder. On the back right side is another rotary dial, that will be your shutter speed setting, In A mode the camera will set it automatically, but in full manual you can control that as well.Thank you for that.
I'm gonna take your advice on what to change.
This is a dumb question, but how do I change the f/stop..?? I haven't been able to figure that part out...
I have a Nikon D3300.
In the first pic, the front chicken is out of focus and it has a lot of motion blur in the head. Also the camera is not level. The post and the tree in the background are slanted. You need to twist the camera clockwise a little to make everything level. Also the front chickens tail is cropped off. Ideally you want the entire chicken in the frame, or just his head for a portait. If you got 90% of his body in frame you really should include his entire body.What do you think? I did turn the camera to landscape