cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

New to Photography. Question about settings.

clark77494
Contributor

I just purchased a Canon EOS Rebel T5 to do Real Estate photography. For outside photos I want to set it to ISO 400, f/5.6 and let the camera determine the shutter speed. On the inside I want to set the camera to f/7.1 ISO 200 wih no flash, and also let the camera determine the shutter speed. I have a tripod so slow shutter speeds should not be a problem. I have a 18mm-55mm lens that came with the camera. I have two years video production training so I know how to setup a motion picture camera, just never took stills except with my Iphone.

53 REPLIES 53


@clark77494 wrote:

I just purchased a Canon EOS Rebel T5 to do Real Estate photography. For outside photos I want to set it to ISO 400, f/5.6 and let the camera determine the shutter speed. On the inside I want to set the camera to f/7.1 ISO 200 wih no flash, and also let the camera determine the shutter speed. I have a tripod so slow shutter speeds should not be a problem. I have a 18mm-55mm lens that came with the camera. I have two years video production training so I know how to setup a motion picture camera, just never took stills except with my Iphone.


Canon's more expensive cameras give you the option of defining sets of settings, so that you can set them all with one turn of the mode dial. But I've never seen a Rebel with that feature, so I think you'll have to change those settings manually when you go indoors or outdoors. Check your manual, of course, to be sure I'm right about that.

Bob
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA

Waddizzle
Legend
Legend

@clark77494 wrote:

I just purchased a Canon EOS Rebel T5 to do Real Estate photography. For outside photos I want to set it to ISO 400, f/5.6 and let the camera determine the shutter speed. On the inside I want to set the camera to f/7.1 ISO 200 wih no flash, and also let the camera determine the shutter speed. I have a tripod so slow shutter speeds should not be a problem. I have a 18mm-55mm lens that came with the camera. I have two years video production training so I know how to setup a motion picture camera, just never took stills except with my Iphone.


For serious professional work, a Rebel T5 will require careful shooting to get professional results.  With a Rebel T5, I would not let ISO get above ISO 200, if you want to achieve critical focus, sharpness and low noise.  The T5 does begin to show noise at ISO 400, while not much, it is there and you would need to be removed in post.  While the noise can be easily removed, your sharpness will suffer a bit.

 

I own a T5, and it is a great little camera, provided I keep the ISO at 100.  The 18-55mm lens that comes with the T5 camera kit, is not professional grade.  You will always want to shoot at ISO 100 with that lens.  You will always want to manually focus the lens using Live View, also.  It is a rather fragile lens, also.  It lacks manual focus override, and many new users will accidentally turn the focus ring, instead of the zoom ring, which throws the autofocusing motors out of alignment.

 

If you're doing professional real estate work, then I suggest that you consider a better lens.  I'd recommend the super wide angle EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM lens.  It has image quality that rivals Canon's "L Series" of professional grade lenses.

 

Finally, invest in a professional grade tripod, one with a detachable, interchangeable head.  You will not find a professional tripod at the Big Blue Box store.  I recommend looking on line at retailers like B&H Photo Video.  I recommend getting one that can support close to 20 lbs, if not more.  Tripods tend to shake and vibrate in the wind.

--------------------------------------------------------
"Enjoying photography since 1972."

TTMartin
Authority
Authority

@clark77494 wrote:

I just purchased a Canon EOS Rebel T5 to do Real Estate photography. For outside photos I want to set it to ISO 400, f/5.6 and let the camera determine the shutter speed. On the inside I want to set the camera to f/7.1 ISO 200 wih no flash, and also let the camera determine the shutter speed. I have a tripod so slow shutter speeds should not be a problem. I have a 18mm-55mm lens that came with the camera. I have two years video production training so I know how to setup a motion picture camera, just never took stills except with my Iphone.


You'll want Av mode.

 

In Av mode you set the Aperture and ISO and the camera determines the shutter speed.

 

No problem for the T5 and no problem getting professional Real Estate photos with ANY modern dSLR. 

TTmartin, 

Thank you for the advice. The information is not in the user’s manual. If it is it is buried somewhere. I found a work around in manual mode by holding down the shutter button halfway and dialing in the proper shutter speed. Your method will make it a lot faster so I don’t have to dial in the shutter speed. Here is the link to the current photos. After I shoot the house tomorrow. I will let you know, and see if there is any room for improvement.

The Amenity photos were taken by a professional photographer.

http://www.zillow.com/homes/for_rent/20110-Wrights-Crossing-ST-Katy-TX-77449_rb/?fromHomePage=true&s...

Clark,

 

As you and Tim both say, if you have a tripod, you are gold. Real estate shots present some of the least challenging requirements asked of cameras. No moving subjects. No need for sophisticated autofocus. So no need for bright lenses, large sensors for high ISO oerformance, nothing. 

 

Get a solid tripod. Use the 2 second delay to make sure any vibration from your finger pressing the shutter stops before the picture is taken. 

 

Use Av mode, which is Aperture Value or aperture priority. You set the aperture, camera sets as long a shutter as needed. 

 

Go go ahead and use ISO 100 if you are on a tripod.  You will see degredation in image quality by ISO 400, and since you are on a tipod there's no need for higher ISO.  

 

If you need a wider wider angle lens, Canon has a 10-22 and a 10-18mm lens. Both are good according to the reviews and the newer one, the 10-18, is half the price of the 10-22.  

Scott

Canon 5d mk 4, Canon 6D, EF 70-200mm L f/2.8 IS mk2; EF 16-35 f/2.8 L mk. III; Sigma 35mm f/1.4 "Art" EF 100mm f/2.8L Macro; EF 85mm f/1.8; EF 1.4x extender mk. 3; EF 24-105 f/4 L; EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 IS; 3x Phottix Mitros+ speedlites

Why do so many people say "FER-tographer"? Do they take "fertographs"?

Funny your listing is in Katy.  We lived there for 10 years before moving up to PA 7 years ago.  Loved it, but we went back for a visit this year and almost didn't recognize the place for all the growth. 

Scott

Canon 5d mk 4, Canon 6D, EF 70-200mm L f/2.8 IS mk2; EF 16-35 f/2.8 L mk. III; Sigma 35mm f/1.4 "Art" EF 100mm f/2.8L Macro; EF 85mm f/1.8; EF 1.4x extender mk. 3; EF 24-105 f/4 L; EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 IS; 3x Phottix Mitros+ speedlites

Why do so many people say "FER-tographer"? Do they take "fertographs"?

Waddizzle,

I did purchase a Canon EF-S 10-18mm f/4.5-5.6 IS STM Lens for $279.00. Also, I have a sturdy Tripod that I use with my Sony FX7 Mini-DV camera. The Tripod that came with the Canon kit was questionable. I will take your advice and shoot it at 100 ISO. The professional photographer I used for Real Estate is using a Canon EOS 5DS-R camera. It seems he must have had a more sensitive CMOS sensor since my camera is taking 1-2 seconds per shot. Versus his less than a second at f7.1 at 200 ISO. I am using Corel PaintShop Pro X6. Which probably wouldn’t do it for wedding photography. Neither would the camera for that matter. I will send you the link to the house I’m shooting tomorrow once it is completed. The Professional photographer charged me over $2,000 last year and had a two week waiting list. We had a lot of redoes last year since the contractor said the house would be ready and I would schedule the shoot two weeks out and the contractor would be behind. This way I can photo them as soon as the houses are completed and not have a scheduling problem. My contractor said the Professional Photographer only took 20 minutes to complete the house.  

Clark

Scott,

I was able to get it working in AV mode. What I was doing wrong is there is a light scale in the middle of the menu that goes from minus 4 to plus 4. I moved the pointer from minus 4 until it was at Zero on the scale and that fixed the lighting problem. Now the shutter speed is 4.5 seconds, except now it is taking phenomenal photos.  I haven’t reduced the photos yet, will work on that tomorrow.

Clark,IMG_0077.JPG


@clark77494 wrote:

Waddizzle,

I did purchase a Canon EF-S 10-18mm f/4.5-5.6 IS STM Lens for $279.00. Also, I have a sturdy Tripod that I use with my Sony FX7 Mini-DV camera. The Tripod that came with the Canon kit was questionable. I will take your advice and shoot it at 100 ISO. The professional photographer I used for Real Estate is using a Canon EOS 5DS-R camera. It seems he must have had a more sensitive CMOS sensor since my camera is taking 1-2 seconds per shot. Versus his less than a second at f7.1 at 200 ISO. I am using Corel PaintShop Pro X6. Which probably wouldn’t do it for wedding photography. Neither would the camera for that matter. I will send you the link to the house I’m shooting tomorrow once it is completed. The Professional photographer charged me over $2,000 last year and had a two week waiting list. We had a lot of redoes last year since the contractor said the house would be ready and I would schedule the shoot two weeks out and the contractor would be behind. This way I can photo them as soon as the houses are completed and not have a scheduling problem. My contractor said the Professional Photographer only took 20 minutes to complete the house.  

Clark


For no good reason except curiosity, which of the photos in the link you posted were taken by a professional?

Bob
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA
Announcements