Need advice on outdoor pictures for company activity

ken

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My company decided to have a carnival this week, starting at 2:30pm
(Atlanta area if that makes a difference). I decided to take my camera
to take pictures. I didn't expect great results, given the time of day
(not much haze, the sky was a nice blue), but was really disappointed at
how bad the results actually were.

I used a Digital Rebel with a Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 lens. I attached a
circular polarizer and set my f-stop at 4.0, to get some but not all
background, enough to set off the pics of the people involved. I
photographed in Av mode and let the camera choose the speed. I had the
camera set on automatic white balance.

First thing I noticed upon downloading the pics to the computer was the
washed out highlights (lots of white tee shirts) and dark faces. As much
as possible, I tried to take pics when peoples faces were at least
somewhat highlghted by the sun. Pics in the sun tended to have a
reddish/purplish cast. Pics in the shade tended to have a blueish cast
(I'd have to assume because of the polarizer).

It took a lot of Photoshop work, shadow/highlight, levels, to get some
good pictures. Out of 200 pictures, I managed to get 71.

What could I have done, should I have done, to ensure better pictures?
 
G

Guest

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Archived from groups: rec.photo.digital (More info?)

71 of 200 ? that a good number already ! :p

I shot 600 frames and managed to get less than 10 excellent , and around 50
good ones.
[indoor amateur basketball competition]

For one, you won't need to use a C-PL as you are aiming for the people ..
not the scenery.
+ an unrotated c-pl will produce a dark, very murky shot.

=bob=

"Ken" <kewaynco@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:KPGdnb_GyqViCXzfRVn-pQ@comcast.com...
> My company decided to have a carnival this week, starting at 2:30pm
> (Atlanta area if that makes a difference). I decided to take my camera to
> take pictures. I didn't expect great results, given the time of day (not
> much haze, the sky was a nice blue), but was really disappointed at how
> bad the results actually were.
>
> I used a Digital Rebel with a Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 lens. I attached a
> circular polarizer and set my f-stop at 4.0, to get some but not all
> background, enough to set off the pics of the people involved. I
> photographed in Av mode and let the camera choose the speed. I had the
> camera set on automatic white balance.
>
> First thing I noticed upon downloading the pics to the computer was the
> washed out highlights (lots of white tee shirts) and dark faces. As much
> as possible, I tried to take pics when peoples faces were at least
> somewhat highlghted by the sun. Pics in the sun tended to have a
> reddish/purplish cast. Pics in the shade tended to have a blueish cast
> (I'd have to assume because of the polarizer).
>
> It took a lot of Photoshop work, shadow/highlight, levels, to get some
> good pictures. Out of 200 pictures, I managed to get 71.
>
> What could I have done, should I have done, to ensure better pictures?
 

Marvin

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May 2, 2004
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Ken wrote:
> My company decided to have a carnival this week, starting at 2:30pm
> (Atlanta area if that makes a difference). I decided to take my camera
> to take pictures. I didn't expect great results, given the time of day
> (not much haze, the sky was a nice blue), but was really disappointed at
> how bad the results actually were.
>
> I used a Digital Rebel with a Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 lens. I attached a
> circular polarizer and set my f-stop at 4.0, to get some but not all
> background, enough to set off the pics of the people involved. I
> photographed in Av mode and let the camera choose the speed. I had the
> camera set on automatic white balance.
>
> First thing I noticed upon downloading the pics to the computer was the
> washed out highlights (lots of white tee shirts) and dark faces. As much
> as possible, I tried to take pics when peoples faces were at least
> somewhat highlghted by the sun. Pics in the sun tended to have a
> reddish/purplish cast. Pics in the shade tended to have a blueish cast
> (I'd have to assume because of the polarizer).
>
> It took a lot of Photoshop work, shadow/highlight, levels, to get some
> good pictures. Out of 200 pictures, I managed to get 71.
>
> What could I have done, should I have done, to ensure better pictures?

A fill flash is a must for photos of people in sunlight. The camera's manual should tell
you how to set it up.