radi0j0hn
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loramae35 wrote:I have found that a tripod works best if you want to take the picture. I was trying to take pictures of birds the other day and everytime I snapped the picture, it came out blurry, so yes, I now need to buy a tripod. But hey...they're cheap! Otherwise it's a great camera and I love it!
In my book, I explain that when a lens has a smallish lens opening, less light comes in, which means the camera uses a slower shutter speed to compensate. That's why the shots are "blurry" which is really camera shake or subject movement or both. Also, long tele lenses magnify the shake as they magnify the image. (See the fine print below for what book I am talking about.)
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radi0j0hn
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seancool wrote:There are many strategies to help you keep your camera stable when shooting. (without a tripod)Something that will help a lot is making sure your stance is stable. Try kneeling and putting an elbow on your thigh. Also use the camera strap to add tension and keep the camera stable.
I teach digital photography, tutor and wrote a book on the subject. Here's the bottom line: There are tons of people who "hope" they will be able take super INDOOR action shots of their kids doing basketball, etc. with this $149.95 camera. The answer is "no." At f/5.6 or less indoors, no amount of holding the camera steady will do a thing to stop subject motion when the camera sets a shutter speed of 1/20th of a second to make up for the lack of light entering the lens. Try cranking up the ISO as high as possible to see if that can help, and maybe, maybe, you might get lucky. But there's a reason why pros spend a LOT more money (as in $2,000+) just for the LENS they use. OUTSIDE your chances improve, but the responsiveness of the camera will not match the ones the pro use. You still may get lucky once in a while. But this is a very nice amateur camera for other uses. "Get the right tool for the job."
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Ringo4422
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Can no longer open the discussions page from my work place. Whatever the change was it killed my capabilities at work. Nice job Woot. Phone blog only? I think not.
Vizio 32” 720p LCD HDTV (2 of them), Seagate 750GB SATA/300 7200RPM Hard Drive, SiliconDust HDHomeRun Dual Digital HDTV Tuner, Kodak Theater HD Player, Acer Aspire One 10.1” Netbook, Philips Prestigo 8-Device Universal Remote, Asus Eee PC 900 Netbook with 1.6GHz Atom Processor, Philips Upconverting DVD Player with DivX and HDMI, Ashley Rock Axe Full Size Rockband and Guitar Hero Controller for PS2 and PS3, Philips Icon 5 Device Universal Remote, and a bunch of other carp.
radi0j0hn
quality posts: 78
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In an effort to keep prices low, makers are removing secondary optical or small electronic viewfinders. I recently left my DSLR at home and went to a parade with a camera with only the screen on the back. Outside, I couldn't see a darn thing. With a super-zoom camera like this, holding the camera away from your body so you can see the screen while zooming way out is not "ergonomic" and not the best way to keep the camera steady. I'd pass on this one, even though the image quality is probably quite good.
If you are concerned about composing the photo, not simply "point and guess," I'd strongly suggest a viewfinder you can actually see.
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radi0j0hn
quality posts: 78
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hoosiergirl65 wrote:How does this perform under low light? I have found that the Fuji line does great in low light, wondering about this one since it's such a good price....
If you are getting good results with your Fuji, you MIGHT get lucky with this one. But the usual answer is: No! No! No! The laws of physics are against you! You can't shoot at a high shutter speed in low light with a lens that does not let in a LOT of light, unless the ISO (sensitivity) of the camera is about 5 times better than today's cameras. You get what you pay for, and you are NOT going to get action-stopping shots of you kid inside a gym making the game-scoring shot with this camera...or almost any camera with a lens that is f/5.6 when zoomed. It will also not be as responsive as a pro camera. Outdoors, great, indoors, forget about it.
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inkycatz
quality posts: 105
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BigRedCheese wrote:You can buy this same camera on Amazon.com for 120.99
Links help!
I'm just hanging out, really.