DPChallenge: A Digital Photography Contest You are not logged in. (log in or register
 

DPChallenge Forums >> Photography Discussion >> spot test!
Pages:  
Showing posts 1 - 11 of 11, (reverse)
AuthorThread
04/23/2003 10:18:24 PM · #1
I have learnt a little about spot metre oppossed to multi on DP , so last night when i took the wife and kids out for dinner i noticed the sun setting behind the hills.

I spot metred on the sun held the exposure and moved my camera down, Does anyone think the water is too dark or have i created the right effect?




//www.pbase.com/image/15825405

i can never post a pic directly ...sigh ;(

Message edited by author 2003-04-23 22:28:16.
04/23/2003 10:25:53 PM · #2
That looks pretty good -- I've been working on the same thing. It's usually possible to post-adjust to bring out areas which are too dark, but once you've blown the highlights out to 0% there's nothing left to recover or adjust.
04/23/2003 10:30:54 PM · #3
Great pic. I like the effect.
04/23/2003 10:50:51 PM · #4
do you have a multi metered shot that we can compare side by side?
04/23/2003 10:52:16 PM · #5
Lovely shot....Should take the family out to eat more often!!
:)
04/23/2003 11:07:44 PM · #6
Whether you captured the right effect or not depends on the effect you
were trying to capture.

I think you captured the effect of the sunset on the water perfectly. I
like the gold hue it creates. (IMO anyway)

04/23/2003 11:27:02 PM · #7
I like the shot as it is as well .. great one !
04/24/2003 01:35:06 AM · #8
Originally posted by achiral:

do you have a multi metered shot that we can compare side by side?


no archiral i was experimenting with spot metering only....all i can say is the water and boats where a lot lighter than it appears in the photo, and i was impressed with how you can make it look dark with this method.

04/24/2003 03:42:01 AM · #9
I would have tried spot metering in different places to compare shots. Like one on the sun (like you did), one just to the side of the sun, one in the sky, one in the water, etc.

Like cpanaioti said, it depends on the effect you were tring to capture. If you spot meter the different levels of light you can see the effect yourself, and decided if you made the right choice. And know what choice to make next time. You can just erase the ones you don't like.

BTW I like the this shot as it is too...
04/24/2003 03:46:01 AM · #10
Originally posted by Fiver:

I would have tried spot metering in different places to compare shots. Like one on the sun (like you did), one just to the side of the sun, one in the sky, one in the water, etc.

Like cpanaioti said, it depends on the effect you were tring to capture. If you spot meter the different levels of light you can see the effect yourself, and decided if you made the right choice. And know what choice to make next time. You can just erase the ones you don't like.

BTW I like the this shot as it is too...


good point thanks, ill try that next time
04/24/2003 11:34:51 AM · #11
Beautiful shot - the sky has stayed so blue: does it just do that there, or did you use a white balance trick or filter? I like it a lot - especially the water reflections. Had it been me, I'd have taken an even shorter exposure I think.

What was shutter speed and aperture? My 602 seems to produce best results at f/5.6 - but scenes like that require shutterspeeds up in the thousands (which is OK as it goes to 1/10000).

Ed

Message edited by author 2003-04-24 11:43:15.
Pages:  
Current Server Time: 07/25/2025 09:04:16 PM

Please log in or register to post to the forums.


Home - Challenges - Community - League - Photos - Cameras - Lenses - Learn - Help - Terms of Use - Privacy - Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 07/25/2025 09:04:16 PM EDT.