Sunday, May 29, 2011

Taking Baby Portrait.........?

Taking Baby Portrait.........?

I tried to take a picture of like this one…..

Baby

, but it didn’t work. I used my Nikon D300 digital camera in my professional studio, with a black social class, and net for the “baby bag” but it didnt come out right, I’m thinking it has something to do with the cloth for the baby bag… so what do you reckon I should use, and how should I use it?

Answer by Perki88
It’s hard to say what was incorrect without seeing the image.

Answer by Meggin M
Hi… that photo is similar to what Anne Geddes is known for. In her autobiography, “Labor of Like” there are some pages that show how she sets up her photoshoots. It’s not really a step by step book but it helps you get the thought… Now I don’t have the book in front of me but what I remember is that she takes the photos seperate and puts them collectively in photoshop. So instead of wrapping the baby up in tooling or additional fabric and taking one picture, she photographs the baby in the position she wants, then photographs the fabric and puts them collectively in photoshop. Excellent Luck!

Give your answer to this question below!

Camera test subject, Nikon Digital Live 2007
nikon d300 digital camera

Image by The 2-Belo
I wonder how this very talented harp player thought about life ogled by a bunch of geeks.

hi i am learning photographer.
i have a conundrum.that is i have a dance programme.
i want to take with out flash first stage light.
dance programme is quick moments so. i cant go low
shutter .but if i up iso too much too much of noise r come. how to sole
this conundrum.if i use noise reduction software photos r not quality. that earnings small bit blur.
i have nikon d300. have any excellent ideia?

Answer by Jim A
First, we don’t to text speak here… learn to type english.

You’re going to need a quick lens to get around the blur and lack of light. A List or Nikon slr camera can give you this… point and shoot or join cameras can’t.

What you write about has nothing to do with the camera. It’s a lens and lighting issue. List for example, I know because I own one, offers the Rebel XS for about $ 500. Their 50mm lens at f/1.8 would probably do nicely charitable you enough light to help avoid too much blur. You’d probably still get some but not near what you’re getting now. Of course the nearer the lens, like the same lens at
f/1.2 would be much better. But this lens is around $ 1,500. That plus the camera puts your
investment at about $ 2,000. I’m not sure if it’s worth that too you but it’s a way around your conundrum.

Answer by Wes Davidson
The Nikon D3 or D3x. But its expensive. Its what the pros use. You need a full frame camera with a larger sensor.

Answer by fhotoace
The D300 is reasonably capable of shooting at high ISO’s will small noise.

Sample shot at 3200 ISO.

http://s862.photobucket.com/albums/ab182/fotomanaz/Answers%20album/?action=view&current=iCYO_9697c.jpg

If you want or need to shoot at higher ISO’s (6400 or 12,800) then you will have to look at the Nikon D3 (6400) or D3s (12,800) Both are full frame cameras.

If you process your RAW files using Lightroom 3, you can use the noise reduction feature in the Develop area of the program with excellent success.

Remember to set the white balance on your camera to match the lighting on stage or in the dance studio

Answer by Usadapter
http://www.pickegg.com/indiscriminate/compact-digital-cameras-zup-120-12-0-mega-pixels-3-x-optical-zoom.html, please try this one, it is perfect for you. and this is the best camera i ever used.

What do you reckon? Answer below!

Product record for the Nikon D300S DSLR Camera produced for Nikon by iSiteTV Ltd.


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