Please rate the picture quality and throw in some tips
Hey guys, I was messing with the camera and some settings and was wanting some feedback. I'm pretty new to the camera thing. Earlier I read that man people shoot photos with the ISO around 100. Thats what I did. So here they are... oh and its with the Sony T1 Thanks










When taking pics at night do you guys use another source of flash besides the one on the camera? I can never get enough lights in the pictures and always get ALOT of noise. plus on night shots, do you set the focus to a wide area, or narrow it in
<TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote, originally posted by GGhatchie »</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">Looks good, is that the password strut tower bar?</TD></TR></TABLE>
Yea, I love it! I have the rear one too. They are soon coming out with the cooling plate for the DC2, I might pick it up for some extra 'bling'
Yea, I love it! I have the rear one too. They are soon coming out with the cooling plate for the DC2, I might pick it up for some extra 'bling'
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pictures look good to me
but you might want to put the lid back on your airbox, having lid off negates the effect of your spoon air filter, the filter gets hotter with the lid off, hence incoming air is hotter, so less power, plus the filter gets alot dirtier alot faster, it be better to put the lid on, and remove the huge resonater in the bumper and use the black pipe that goes from under the box to the huge resonator box, and turn it around to make it a cold air
but you might want to put the lid back on your airbox, having lid off negates the effect of your spoon air filter, the filter gets hotter with the lid off, hence incoming air is hotter, so less power, plus the filter gets alot dirtier alot faster, it be better to put the lid on, and remove the huge resonater in the bumper and use the black pipe that goes from under the box to the huge resonator box, and turn it around to make it a cold air

get lower for a shot like this... it's like you just took your camera, stood straight up, and took the pic.
move the car that's next to it, or move your car.

are you trying to show me the wheel or the lip?
just face the wheel straight on to take a pic of it, if that's what you're trying to show.

not sure if you're trying to show me the front end, and the engine happens to be open, or the headlights... if just trying to show me the front end, i think you should make sure the whole front end is in it, meaning get the bottom part of the lip in there!
<TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote, originally posted by wannaTypeR »</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">When taking pics at night do you guys use another source of flash besides the one on the camera? I can never get enough lights in the pictures and always get ALOT of noise. plus on night shots, do you set the focus to a wide area, or narrow it in</TD></TR></TABLE>
no flash needed.
tripod, tripod, tripod!
put the camera on night settings, or use manual settings (don't know much about the sony t1).
finding a place with white lights is always good, as the colors come out "true" as compared to shooting under yellow/orange-ish street/garage lights. the best way to take good night shots is to shoot at places that have a lot of light.
wide, narrow... depends on what you're shooting.
<TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote, originally posted by uncle_el »</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">
no flash needed.
tripod, tripod, tripod!
put the camera on night settings, or use manual settings (don't know much about the sony t1).
finding a place with white lights is always good, as the colors come out "true" as compared to shooting under yellow/orange-ish street/garage lights. the best way to take good night shots is to shoot at places that have a lot of light.
wide, narrow... depends on what you're shooting.</TD></TR></TABLE>
Thanks, I'll try it out. I'm looking into getting the Nikon 4800, I've heard really good things about it. plus I'll get a tripod! My dad's T1 doesn't have a tripod mount.
no flash needed.
tripod, tripod, tripod!
put the camera on night settings, or use manual settings (don't know much about the sony t1).
finding a place with white lights is always good, as the colors come out "true" as compared to shooting under yellow/orange-ish street/garage lights. the best way to take good night shots is to shoot at places that have a lot of light.
wide, narrow... depends on what you're shooting.</TD></TR></TABLE>
Thanks, I'll try it out. I'm looking into getting the Nikon 4800, I've heard really good things about it. plus I'll get a tripod! My dad's T1 doesn't have a tripod mount.
<TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote, originally posted by BoostedJeff »</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">not bad
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