leighp1 opened this issue on Mar 02, 2001 ยท 6 posts
leighp1 posted Fri, 02 March 2001 at 9:43 AM
a1000standard posted Fri, 02 March 2001 at 12:04 PM
a1000standard posted Fri, 02 March 2001 at 12:09 PM
One more thing: when you post your images you may want to convert them to JPEG format, instead of posting BMP, it will dramatically reduce file size, thus speeding up page download.
Colm_Jackson posted Fri, 02 March 2001 at 1:25 PM
Hi Leigh... a1000 has basically said all that I would have said. The only other advice I can add is: Try to get in closer. It is always possible to crop the image afterwards but, especially with digital you loose a lot of quality. Getting in close and down at the same level is usually always a good thing with 'Child' photography. The same thing can also apply to pets. But... Rules can also be broken. Very nice by the way. Colm...
leighp1 posted Fri, 02 March 2001 at 4:25 PM
a1000, Thanks for the advice, I will definately try to do some more experimenting with the camera, you have realize that right now I am limited on the picture taking thing because my camera is not a great camera, it does not have a flash for it and the pictures have been looking real grainy. About the posting them as jpg, I always save my pictures as jpg, if you look in the properties of that picture up there it is a jpg. So not understanding what you are saying about that... Colm, Thanks for the advice, I am still trying to get the hang of everything I have read. And learning a lot...Glad I found this forum. Leigh
Kurka posted Fri, 02 March 2001 at 6:28 PM
I think it was Edward Weston that said: "If it doesn't look good, you didn't get close enough." When taking portraits, get close. Use a mild telephoto, and fill the frame. If there's any extroneous material, it should tell a story.