06-15-2022 11:36 AM - last edited on 10-28-2022 10:20 AM by Danny
Hey! I am looking to upgrade from an eos T6i. I have experience in the field, but just basic knowledge. I got the camera 4-5 years ago. I recently took pictures of an engagement for a friend and I noticed out of the 80 pictures I took in 3min, only 10-15 of them weren't blurry. I didn't know if this was user error or if it was time to upgrade. I know my camera is perfectly capable of taking great pictures, but I am wanting something that will do the job without me having to stress over if it will preform the way I want it to or not. The shutter speed is not ideal. and the AF is not to my liking. Like I said, this could be me. I just wanted to get on here and get advice from people with experience and professional knowledge. The engagement situation just sparked the idea of buying a new camera. I also took family pictures afterward and some were just grainy or they turned out amazing. I want a camera that will grow with me. I do not have a set budget, just under $2,500 if possible. I have been looking at the 90D and R10. This is just a hobby, but I would be open to it turning into more in the future.
Please help!
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06-15-2022 01:48 PM - edited 06-15-2022 01:52 PM
Just looking at your images:
Exposure - my first reaction is that your camera is over-exposing the subject, which is the people. Most likely, it is getting a meter reading from the undergrowth at the back, which is darker than the people and thus blowing them out. Looking at the EXIF data (your settings) that is because you are using Pattern Metering: where the camera derives its settings from across the frame and if you think of averaging out all of the image, then the people, who are wearing very light clothes, will be over-exposed. So your task is to learn how to be more selective in what the camera meters on and to keep that exposure setting
Aperture: you have the most open aperture the camera can manage, which is ok, but demands that you precisely keep the focus on the people. and on at least one of them it has not done so. So the second skill you need to learn is to be able to hold the focus on your subject despite distracting objects.
Shutter Speed: You shutter speed was quite low, likely because of a combination of your low ISO value and because you camera was metering on dark background that demanded more exposure. This suggests that some of the blurriness could be from your camera movement, and I suspect one of those photos has subject movement in it as well - all from slow shutter speed. As a general rule of thumb, your shutter speed needs to be about 1.5 times the value of your focal length: so a 50mm lens would demand a shutter speed of 1/75sec, 100mm, 1/150sec etc.
So, the thing to explore is how to use a combination of aperture, shutter speed and ISO together to get a correct exposure and the creative results you are seeking.
When I first started photography, I couldn't afford camera gear, so I purchased a book on photography (this is decades before on-line learning) and devoured it for the thick end of a year, using borrowed gear before I got my own cameras. The benefit of the book was it not only explained the principles of photography and how the tech works, but it gave a large number of examples, and explained why the settings were as they were, and how the image was composed. That is invaluable, and I poured over those samples to really analyze the images and learn from them. I recommend that this is still a good way to go - you want to spend time with those images.
There are lots of books on photography out there and, again, the library is a good starting point as you can try different books out and learn from a range of authors.
10-18-2022 08:47 AM
Hi guys! I have been diving into learning more and captured some better pictures! These do a preset on them. What do you think? Any future advice?
10-18-2022 09:41 AM
Image 3, where you have strong backlighting, would be a candidate for trying with pop-up flash for fill flash.
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