One Portrait Outdoors

akrab

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This was taken this evening outdoors in natural light... I am reading my books and practicing trying to get things right in different lighting situations. CC appreciated, I welcome helpful advice as to what could be improved etc. I shot in shutter priority... I was taking different shots with different settings... this one ended up being 1/1000, f1.8, 50mm lens, -1 exposure, ISO 200, matrix metering. If I had bumped up my ISO to 400 would I have been able to get a slower shutter speed with an equivelent aperture? I bumped up the shutter speed to get my aperture away from the f22 the camera was trying to set.

This is as shot and not a cropped version in case that info is needed.



--
Alison
D70
Nikon 50mm f1.8
Nikon 55-200mm f4-5.6
SB 600

Photo Hobbiest Teach me well, I love to learn!
http://www.pbase.com/akrab/root&page=all
 
This was taken this evening outdoors in natural light...
I just love those eyes...
I am
reading my books and practicing trying to get things right in
different lighting situations. CC appreciated, I welcome helpful
advice as to what could be improved etc. I shot in shutter
priority...
For portraits (and landscape, for instance), I would use Aperture priority. This will give you control over DOF.
I was taking different shots with different settings...
this one ended up being 1/1000, f1.8, 50mm lens, -1 exposure, ISO
200, matrix metering. If I had bumped up my ISO to 400 would I have
been able to get a slower shutter speed with an equivelent
aperture?
On the opposite, it would get you higher speeds...
I bumped up the shutter speed to get my aperture away
from the f22 the camera was trying to set.
Good. Run away from those numbers, especially on portraits...

I prefer something like f5.6 or f8 (depending on the lens and distance to subject), but sometimes, loke in your photo, even f1.8 can give you a good result.
Photo Hobbiest Teach me well, I love to learn!
Keep shooting...it's the best way to learn (I believe) :)

--
Paulo Goulart
( http://goulart.zenfolio.com )
 
This was taken this evening outdoors in natural light... I am
reading my books and practicing trying to get things right in
different lighting situations. CC appreciated, I welcome helpful
advice as to what could be improved etc. I shot in shutter
priority... I was taking different shots with different settings...
this one ended up being 1/1000, f1.8, 50mm lens, -1 exposure, ISO
200, matrix metering. If I had bumped up my ISO to 400 would I have
been able to get a slower shutter speed with an equivelent
aperture? I bumped up the shutter speed to get my aperture away
from the f22 the camera was trying to set.

This is as shot and not a cropped version in case that info is needed.
Bumping up your ISO would cause a faster, not slower shutter speed.

With a tight crop like that you probably want more DOF not less so I would stop down to 5.6 or 8. This will also bring your shutter speed down.

Ant.
 
STunning Alison! I can only hope to get photos this great!!!

Do you mind me asking how you get the camera info to show in the photos? I take photos, but once on my computer I have no idea and I never remember what setting/mode/ISO whatever I shot them in. I ordered the 50mm lens, but will not get until Monday! I have had the D50 for 2 days now! :-)
Very nice photo!
Kim K

 
Your daughter's face is likely to become famous if you keep this up!

--
Haven't had this kind of fun since high school!
 
You can see it in properties in Photoshop et al. Also, do a search for Opanda. You can use this to right click (in the browser or explorer) and view exif data.

Ant.
 
the only point that i missed is why you choose shutter priority when all you want to do is to get away from f22? why can't u choose aperture priority instead? you sure got very far away from f22 (to f1.8!)

anyway it's a great potrait, so that counts the most
 
2 younger children that move a lot so I have been practicing in shutter priority to prevent motion blur... it works :) I have had better results when shooting them in that mode.
--
Alison
D70
Nikon 50mm f1.8
Nikon 55-200mm f4-5.6
SB 600

Photo Hobbiest Teach me well, I love to learn!
http://www.pbase.com/akrab/root&page=all
 
(I shoot in RAW) it displays each pictures details. Also I use Opanda exif viewer (which is free) to also view the exif info. Hope that helps.

Thank you for the nice comments :)
--
Alison
D70
Nikon 50mm f1.8
Nikon 55-200mm f4-5.6
SB 600

Photo Hobbiest Teach me well, I love to learn!
http://www.pbase.com/akrab/root&page=all
 

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