I’m going to be in a safety boat in the ocean that is inside the usual safety zone. I’ve been told the pilots use the boat as a marker to align their flybys. The viewing area is on shore at Huntington Beach.
I have an opportunity to shoot an air show-Blue Angeles. Any tips on settings?
Robert. Could you expand on your comment? The storage size was the main reason I wanted to change to JPEG.
Background. Shooting Nikon D810. Post processing with LR
I just shot about 120 pictures of a rental unit before renters move in. I shot in RAW and should have shot in jpeg. I’m going to put the pictures on a thumb drive for record keeping. What is the easiest way to now convert to JPEG for record keeping? I don’t want to do any post processing.
“Twelve significant photographs in any one year is a good crop.” – Ansel Adams
I am using Nik Software for post photo editing after doing basic editing in LR cc. When I do the editing the files they automatically end up being tif files. I was told to edit using PSD files. I am not sure how to create PSD files or the benefits of one over the other. Any insight would be appreciated.
I took a seminar from a National Geographic photographer in the 70s and he said to get your pictures selected by the editor you had to have something red in it. Not all shots but most because it caught the eye but wasn’t as distracting as yellow. Looking at NG now they appear to have revised the criteria.
In a Chinese cemetery in Hawaii. The groundskeeper said, after I’d already taken a dozen shots, the souls of the dead would be In my camera. A few days later I missed my flight home. I think it was somehow related.
I use LR Classic and shoot with a Nikon d810
I want to print a full image (3x4) image on 8.5 x11 paper. I can’t figure out how to reduce the image to fit onto that sheet size.
Any input would be appreciated.
I use a Canon Pro-10. FYI.
I asked essentially the same question about 10 days ago. Get ready, I got over 10 pages of answers. I’ll give you the quick summary. Always. Never. Sometimes. With a lot of sarcasm, indignity and expertise thrown in.
My take was if you need quick ISO adjustments with varying light conditions use it. If you are taking landscape and have plenty of time to set it, don’t use it.
Not in response to the question but related.
I have trouble adjusting(reaching) my polarizer with the lense shade hood on. Ideas? Techniques that work?
Thank you. It has been elucidating.
Contrary to all of the above, I would spend time using my phone camera to practice composition and content.
There are a number of forums regarding phone cameras and you will see amazing results. You can do a lot with your phone.
Once you feel you are ready to get larger prints of your shots, then look into DSLR cameras.