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Nikon DSLR Cameras
Out of Production DSLRs
D3000/D5000
Taking outdoor winter family photos
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<blockquote data-quote="Richard Jackson" data-source="post: 11099" data-attributes="member: 3817"><p>Use the beach scene mode and get yourself a copy of Lightroom, then lift up the light tones and darker tones and keep the shadows nice and strong, each picture will be different. As long as the blues from the sky don't reflect you can pull up the vibrancy and for the reds and greens use saturation. To pull out blue reflections use the individual colour controls, select blue and pull down the saturation of it and play with the luminosity. Digital Camera's require digital manipulation and always use raw if possible unless you want to take a load of continuous shots and then its not a good idea due to the buffer in the D5000 which isn't really enough.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Richard Jackson, post: 11099, member: 3817"] Use the beach scene mode and get yourself a copy of Lightroom, then lift up the light tones and darker tones and keep the shadows nice and strong, each picture will be different. As long as the blues from the sky don't reflect you can pull up the vibrancy and for the reds and greens use saturation. To pull out blue reflections use the individual colour controls, select blue and pull down the saturation of it and play with the luminosity. Digital Camera's require digital manipulation and always use raw if possible unless you want to take a load of continuous shots and then its not a good idea due to the buffer in the D5000 which isn't really enough. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
Out of Production DSLRs
D3000/D5000
Taking outdoor winter family photos
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