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Jul 17, 2018 07:18:19   #
rosarioc62 Loc: Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
 
my first time doing this type of photography. Location : my friends office. used only ambient light. camera full frame lense Tokina AT-X 16-28 F2.8 PRO FX; s/s 3.0 sec; f/11; ISO 100, Aperture priority; Centerweighted-Average. need your cc as i need to learn and avoid mistakes if any. Thanks guys.

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Jul 17, 2018 07:36:15   #
wormtownspawn
 
you can get some interesting effects by using the wrong white balance with indoor shooting. like incandescent when shooting in florescent etc.

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Jul 17, 2018 07:36:15   #
wormtownspawn
 
you can get some interesting effects by using the wrong white balance with indoor shooting. like incandescent when shooting in florescent etc.

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Jul 17, 2018 07:50:57   #
rosarioc62 Loc: Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
 
wormtownspawn wrote:
you can get some interesting effects by using the wrong white balance with indoor shooting. like incandescent when shooting in florescent etc.
thats a good idea...thanks

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Jul 17, 2018 08:47:43   #
Morning Star Loc: West coast, North of the 49th N.
 
Don't know if this can be helped with a different lens, or different "point of view", but the first thing that caught my eye was that the plant and two bowls on the table will start sliding off any moment now.
While the far and left walls are perfectly straight and level, front and right of the photo are sloping down.
I don't think that would normally be a big deal, except that it caught my eye before I saw anything else in that photo.

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Jul 17, 2018 11:32:03   #
Charles 46277 Loc: Fulton County, KY
 
Morningstar, is there any way to correct that without a view camera (movable back)?

Morning Star wrote:
Don't know if this can be helped with a different lens, or different "point of view", but the first thing that caught my eye was that the plant and two bowls on the table will start sliding off any moment now.
While the far and left walls are perfectly straight and level, front and right of the photo are sloping down.
I don't think that would normally be a big deal, except that it caught my eye before I saw anything else in that photo.

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Jul 17, 2018 12:34:05   #
Morning Star Loc: West coast, North of the 49th N.
 
Charles 46277 wrote:
Morningstar, is there any way to correct that without a view camera (movable back)?


I'm thinking of a different point of view, maybe two or three steps to the left.
Or a different focal length for your lens. This photo was taken at 16mm. If you had space to move back, you might be able to try the same scene at maybe 20 - 24 mm. Staying in the same spot, you would be "sacrificing" the edges of the image with a longer focal length.

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Jul 17, 2018 13:18:55   #
PhotoKurtz Loc: Carterville, IL
 
Ditto MorningStar... or pivot to the right to be square with the table. The fact that's so far forward in the scene exagerates the perspective.

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Jul 17, 2018 21:23:07   #
rosarioc62 Loc: Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
 
Morning Star wrote:
I'm thinking of a different point of view, maybe two or three steps to the left.
Or a different focal length for your lens. This photo was taken at 16mm. If you had space to move back, you might be able to try the same scene at maybe 20 - 24 mm. Staying in the same spot, you would be "sacrificing" the edges of the image with a longer focal length.
the space was too tight and the only choice of lense i had was 16 mm or 50 mm.

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