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Showing posts from August, 2017

Use Camera Remote For Timelapse Photography

Time-lapse photography is one of the interesting techniques that almost all newcomers know about that. It allows to record such specific scenes or objects those take significant time to be changed. Taking such videos are really challenging and it needs huge patience with proper sense of photography. Maximum people may watch the fasting moving cloud videos, fast moving vehicle videos and those are the right example for time-lapse photography. Such special cameras take from few hours to few days to shoot such scenes. Hours and hours worth photos are compressed into video with few minutes playtime that creates great time lapsing effect.   Ultimately, it allows the viewers to watch such scenes progress faster without waiting a long actual time. For instance, from sun rise to sun set it takes almost 12 hours which is not possible for a viewer to wait but when someone will see that within 10 seconds, it will surely amazing. This is all about time-lapse photography.  Now the time is

10 Features of Your DSLR Camera You Should Know

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versatile camera trigger Here are two features of your DSLR camera that you should know. They will help improve you as a photographer... Shooting Modes #1 (Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority, and Manual modes) Aperture Priority Mode... This lets you control / adjust the aperture, while the camera takes charge of determining the shutter speed, based upon the other settings (including the aperture). Background elements in your scene become either crystal clear or blurred by adjusting the aperture. As you focus on your main subject, more will be the background elements blurred, the wider the aperture. Conversely, without them being lost to the blurring that occurs with the wider apertures you can include more things in your scene by using a narrower aperture. The versatile camera trigger is also a factor. Brighten or darken the overall image is another thing that aperture adjustment does: you're letting more light in through the lens with a wider aperture, and on