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General Photography
Portrait
The hardest thing about not being a "real" photographer...
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<blockquote data-quote="Don Kuykendall_RIP" data-source="post: 240767" data-attributes="member: 6277"><p>Move the people from in front of the window</p><p>Or</p><p>Fill in flash</p><p>OR </p><p>Shoot in RAW so you can bring down the highlight and bring up the shadows</p><p></p><p>Spot metering can work but you have to be very careful to read on the correct place. After you shoot you can always look at the shot and see if you got it right and adjust and shoot again. Next time just tell them to move. </p><p></p><p>i had someone try to tell me to prop my camera on a box on the table to get a shot with me in it. I just looked at them like they were crazy and told them there was no way I would do that. First the shot would be terrible and second I would never risk my D7000 with 18-105 and SB700 balanced on a box on a table. There is not a shot in the world worth that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Don Kuykendall_RIP, post: 240767, member: 6277"] Move the people from in front of the window Or Fill in flash OR Shoot in RAW so you can bring down the highlight and bring up the shadows Spot metering can work but you have to be very careful to read on the correct place. After you shoot you can always look at the shot and see if you got it right and adjust and shoot again. Next time just tell them to move. i had someone try to tell me to prop my camera on a box on the table to get a shot with me in it. I just looked at them like they were crazy and told them there was no way I would do that. First the shot would be terrible and second I would never risk my D7000 with 18-105 and SB700 balanced on a box on a table. There is not a shot in the world worth that. [/QUOTE]
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The hardest thing about not being a "real" photographer...
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