mercredi 22 février 2017

NR

NOISE REDUCTION


0.6 sec at f/5.6, ISO 100  (No NR) 
0.6 sec at f/5.6, ISO 100 (LOW NR)
0.6 sec at f/5.6, ISO 100 (STANDARD NR)

0.6 sec at f/5.6, ISO 100 (STRONG NR) 


1/15 sec at f/5.6, ISO 800 (No NR)

1/15 sec at f/5.6, ISO 800 (LOW NR)

1/15 sec at f/5.6, ISO 800 (STANDRARD NR)

1/15 sec at f/5.6, ISO 800 (STRONG)

1/60 SEC AT F/5.6 ISO 3200 (No NR)

1/60 SEC AT F/5.6 ISO 3200 (LOW NR)

1/60 SEC AT F/5.6 ISO 3200 (STANDARD NR)

1/60 SEC AT F/5.6 ISO 3200 (STRONG NR)
In general, the Auto Lighting Optimizer (Noise Reduction) did help a bit. It also made the image a bit brighter. I wouldn't go higher than the low option as it soften the image. To be honest, I'd rather change location or the quality of the light than use this feature. Maybe it works well with some cameras, but with mine, I don't see that much difference with the low setting and the other ones are not really usable. This is why I personally wouldn't use this option.

mercredi 15 février 2017

WB

WHITE BALANCE WORKSHOP

Custom WB

Tungsten

AWB

Daylight WB preset: The cold overcast adds a nostalgic feeling to the picture
and the actual environment seems more cold.

AWB: It actually looks the best to me. Made the picture quite neutral.
Shade WB preset: Makes the image warmer. I usually prefer a slightly warmer overcast than a cool one for a portrait.
Fluorescent WB preset: The image has a cool overcast. The model looks sick...


mardi 14 février 2017

ASSINGMENT 1

ASSIGNMENT #1 - CREATIVE USE OF APERTURE, SHUTTER SPEED & ISO



Portrait

Stop motion

Landscape

Panning

Night shot


mercredi 8 février 2017

FOCAL LENGTH - LENSES - WORKSHOP

I have a Canon Rebel t3 and I'm shooting with a Canon EF-S 18-55mm lens.


1/125 sec at f/5.6, ISO 800 (18mm)
More distortion in the background as well as on the object itself.

1/125 sec at f5.6, ISO 800 (55mm)
Less background, less distortion.
1/125 sec at f5.6, ISO 800 (35mm)
The image looks more flat and we see very little of the background compared to the two others.

1/50 sec at f/5.6, ISO 400 (55mm)
The face of the model looks more pleasing. The image looks more flat. This would be perfect for a portrait as it isolates the subject from any context.

1/50 sec at f/5.6, ISO 400 (35mm)
More context (background)

1/50 sec at f/5.6, ISO 400 (18mm)
The background takes more place than the subject. The image and the facial features get more distorted.
1/100 sec at f5.6, ISO 1600 (55mm)
At a higher focal length, with the same aperture, the DOF increases.

1/100 sec at f5.6, ISO 1600 (35mm)

1/100 sec at f5.6, ISO 1600 (18mm)
More context as the background is more in focus then the last two.
1/320 sec at f/4.0, ISO 100 (18mm)
The image is distorted and not as its sharpest.There's also more blur and vignette at this focal length.

1/80 sec at f/8.0, ISO 100 (18mm)
From all the 18mm focal length photos, this one is the sharpest.

1/40 sec at f/16, ISO 200 (18mm)
Not bad but not the sharpest. Less blur and vignette as we go higher with the focal length.

1/80 sec at f/8.0, ISO 100 (35mm)
f/8.0 seems to be the sharpest. This one is probably the sharpest of all. Still a little bit of distortion.

1/50 sec at f/16, ISO 200 (35mm)

1/60 sec at f/8.0, ISO 100 (55mm)
No distortion, the shapes actually look like they're supposed to.
1/60 sec at f/11, ISO 200 (55mm)

1/60 sec at f/22, ISO 800 (55mm)
Overall, for my 18-55mm lens, what seems to be the sharpest aperture is f/8.0 and the sharpest focal length seems to be 35mm (middle).

mercredi 1 février 2017

APERTURE WORKSHOP

1/125 sec at f/5, ISO 400 (40mm)
Only the foreground object is sharp and focus. The first artwork that is in focus captures the viewer's attention as the background is blurred, which create one and only focal point. The blur goes well with the mood of the art. I think that this is the most effective picture because of that.

1/20 sec at f/13, ISO 400 (40 mm)
In this picture, the middle ground becomes more busy, but the first piece of art remains the main focal point. The art pieces start to look like as a whole instead of one individual in the first image.

















1/5 sec at f/25, ISO 400 (40 mm)
Here, everything is sharp and focus so everything becomes a focal point. The viewer is pushed out of the image because of the orientation of the art pieces.



1/15 sec at f/13, ISO 1600 (55 mm)
The subject looks more contrasting from the background. Nice "dreamy" effect. The subject is a little bit more out of context. 

In the second image, the subject is in context (school, in this case) and the background becomes a distraction.












1/15 sec at f/22, ISO 6400 (55 mm)
1/13 sec at f/22, ISO 100 (18 mm)