photography-strut (newbie related)
TREW
2,037 Posts
so i've got this olympus 2mp camera and have really no idea how to use it outside of taking pics of rekkids for ebay.i've noticed that all my 'nightlife' pics tend to come out grainy and blurry when not using the flash, and overexposed and otherworldly when using the flash. can anyone out there gimme advice on how to best adjust the camera's settings to pull of decent nightlife pics??
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-billb
Trew,
the problem is that you're shooting in low light and if you're using an Olympus 2MP, you're talking a really bare bones camera with few, I bet, capabilities for low light. Does that camera even have an adjustable ISO setting? My assumption is that it probably wouldn't. It's just not going to work well with "nightlife" pics - the flash, as you've seen, is going to be harsh but without it, it'll turn out super-grainy and blurry. You'd need, I would think, a better camera. A tripod won't help with the blurriness in this case since really, what you need is a camera with a faster aperture or at least, an ISO adjustment.
For rekkids though: the tripod is a good idea or any stable surface where hand-shake won't be an issue. Make sure the record is well lit BUT make sure it's also EVEN lighting. If it's in one corner, then what you'll see is reflective glare off the record which will be kind of ugly. I used to have an Olympus 1MP camera and I was able to take decent cover shots using it by standing it upright on a tripod and putting the records at the same level, using little more than an ceiling lamp for lighitng.
yes. it's a bare bones jawn but has quite a bit of tweakable settings... what's a good ISO for low light? also, the flash's brightness is adjustable, what's good with that?
thanks for the help out dudes!
I think this is the best way to learn.
I've no idea what an 'Olympus 2MP' is capable of. It may be like Odub says, that you'll never get particularly good result with it. If we were talking old fashioned film SLR's then I could help you, but I dunno bout digital.
Have you ever tried to correct the distortion that a wide angle lens gives in photoshop, or some such?
I took a panaramic view with my lomo, but I did not take the pictures close enough together. So when you try and match up the edge of one, with the next, the propotions are off.
I used to shoot a 1600 film at clubs / gigs with the shutter set at say 1/60 - provided there was a bit of light the results would usually be good:
Currently looking to change it across to digital myself, and these sorts of issues are racking my brain
yes, a lot of people post exact settings you can place into photoshop to correct distortion/barreling of "popular" lenses on the market. Not sure if settings are popular since lomo users consider it the "lomo effect".
trew - fuji f31d. It's the best in class for p&s low light performance. Currently there's a $30 rebate also, lowest price I've seen is around $225.
Thanks for posting that up - looks like a nice n simple one
Thanks Aser.
I always assumed the 'lomo effect' was the colour saturization primarily. The wideangle barreling is minimal.
I found this plugin that does the job. (if anyone else is interested)
But do you know of any good forums, where 'people post' exact settings, or this kind of infomation?