Photography question.
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Temperate |
I have to wake up at 530 in the morning every other day so I can get ready for class and such. Today doesn't even matter now that I know I have to wake up early tomorrow. It really s in my cereal.
Only one thing keeps me from killing myself this week.
I'm going to see JOURNEY on friday, and they are going TO ING ROCK! Def leppard also playing with them, but I don't give a about them.
Of course, I am j/k about killing myself. :p
SHORT ATTENTION SPAN, READ HERE:
I only have 100, and 400 ISO film. I am not experienced with low light photography, is there any way to over-expose the film to get a nice shot? Would it be a waste of film to even try with such slow and insensitive film? It's Fujichrome film, so it is alot harder to work with, when talking about exposure.
And I DID google, and I got nothing. |
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Ang ' ela_ie |
If I understand this correctly, here is what Id do.
No, theres no way to overexpose to get a clear shot at a concert (unless you bring a tripod). Instead, if your camera is goo enough, you can drag the shutter with the flash. That way youll still get a nice color saturation and you wont have a blurry subject.
Google "dragging the shutter." |
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P4z! |
You can "press" the film (I think that's the correct English term), to shoot Iso 400 film with say 3200 Iso. To do that you simply set the camera's Iso to 3200 or which ever iso you would like. You then have to explain to the photodeveloper that he/she has to develop the film as if it would be a 3200 Iso film.
It will get pretty grainy, but you will be able to shoot in low light situations w/o a tripod.
Good luck :)
edit: most slidefilms doesn't work so well with extreme pressing compared to normal negativefilms, so if you only got *chrome films and no other films I suppose your only option is to stand relatively close and use a flash (that is if you have to use an analog camera). |
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EXTREMUM |
quote: | Originally posted by P4z!
It will get pretty grainy...
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That's where Photoshop comes into play... |
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Ang ' ela_ie |
quote: | Originally posted by EXTREMUM
That's where Photoshop comes into play... |
Photoshop for film? Yeah? |
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EXTREMUM |
quote: | Originally posted by Ang ' ela_ie
Photoshop for film? Yeah? |
For touch-up editing, if you decide to digitize your film photos. |
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sw1 |
quote: | Originally posted by Temperate
I have to wake up at 530 in the morning every other day so I can get ready for class and such. Today doesn't even matter now that I know I have to wake up early tomorrow. It really s in my cereal.
Only one thing keeps me from killing myself this week.
I'm going to see JOURNEY on friday, and they are going TO ING ROCK! Def leppard also playing with them, but I don't give a about them.
Of course, I am j/k about killing myself. :p
SHORT ATTENTION SPAN, READ HERE:
I only have 100, and 400 ISO film. I am not experienced with low light photography, is there any way to over-expose the film to get a nice shot? Would it be a waste of film to even try with such slow and insensitive film? It's Fujichrome film, so it is alot harder to work with, when talking about exposure.
And I DID google, and I got nothing. |
Save your 100 ISO film and use your 400 ISO film. I don't recommended setting your camera to EI 3200 with the 400 ISO film. You will need to "push" the film 3 stops and that would only make everything look flat and muddy. Just try to get as close as possible to the stage. If you are close to the stage, try to use your flash. Slide film needs to be exposed properly, within 1/3 of a stop. A little bit of underexposure is better than a little bit of exposure on slide film. |
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