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Author Taking photos of black wheels?
Graeme
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Registered: 26th Jul 04
Location: Northampton
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21st Feb 06 at 22:21   View Garage View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I took these pics of my car the other week and as you can see the wheels dont come up at all, icy will hopefully be able to help as they are his old wheels but overall what are the pics like?
ok?









vibrio
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21st Feb 06 at 22:33   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

it's because they are black. and your flash is not powerfull enough
Graeme
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21st Feb 06 at 22:35   View Garage View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

so only going to really be able to see them in the bright light or with a gd expensive camera, are the pictures ok them selves though as in focus and stuff?
vibrio
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21st Feb 06 at 22:36   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

yes you'll need decent light
Jas
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22nd Feb 06 at 00:16   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

lol i have this problem with mine lol...

thats why I always say black wheels look 100x better in the flesh!
Ian
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Registered: 28th Aug 99
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22nd Feb 06 at 00:38   View Garage View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

You've got a bright sky and headlights on so the camera has metered fairly dark anyway so as not to over-expose those areas.

Ideally you need to manually over-expose to bring up the wheels. You'll blow the highlights (ie. the sky will be one big area of white instead of tones of grey etc.) but the pic will be lighter.

Failing that recompose so the rest of the pic is sympathetic to your subject - ie. its all dark and not so contrasty.
Icy
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Registered: 31st Jan 01
Location: Edinburgh Drives: Mk3 Golf Gti
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22nd Feb 06 at 01:18   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

use shadow highlight on ps
Ian
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Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
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22nd Feb 06 at 01:51   View Garage View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote



PS

Take the photo properly. Post processing isn't the answer to everything
vibrio
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22nd Feb 06 at 09:29   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Ian


PS

Take the photo properly. Post processing isn't the answer to everything



ICY sticks the camera on P FFS
jamesvalver
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Registered: 21st Feb 03
Location: Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
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22nd Feb 06 at 20:27   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

i defo have that problem with my gf's car. there is alot of black on the front and nothing ever comes up on the photos

vibrio
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22nd Feb 06 at 21:05   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

you're picture is underexposed to start with



[Edited on 22-02-2006 by vibrio]
Graeme
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23rd Feb 06 at 17:25   View Garage View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Ian
You've got a bright sky and headlights on so the camera has metered fairly dark anyway so as not to over-expose those areas.

Ideally you need to manually over-expose to bring up the wheels. You'll blow the highlights (ie. the sky will be one big area of white instead of tones of grey etc.) but the pic will be lighter.

Failing that recompose so the rest of the pic is sympathetic to your subject - ie. its all dark and not so contrasty.


that meas bugger all to me!!
vibrio
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23rd Feb 06 at 18:40   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by C4 WLK
quote:
Originally posted by Ian
You've got a bright sky and headlights on so the camera has metered fairly dark anyway so as not to over-expose those areas.

Ideally you need to manually over-expose to bring up the wheels. You'll blow the highlights (ie. the sky will be one big area of white instead of tones of grey etc.) but the pic will be lighter.

Failing that recompose so the rest of the pic is sympathetic to your subject - ie. its all dark and not so contrasty.


that meas bugger all to me!!


it means that because of the sky and the head lights the camera has choosen a fast shutter speed to balance the light. this means the sky etc is not just a blown white colour this means that the dark area's are even darker. put an object on the windowsill and take it's pic. the window will be ok but the object will be dark.
Ian
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24th Feb 06 at 03:49   View Garage View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Forget about aperture, for the purpose of this explanation its not important.

Cam chooses shutter speed based on how much light is there, to expose the pic correctly, ie. not too light, not too dark. Shutter stays open longer = pic will be lighter. Shutter is quick = pic will be darker. The aim is to get a balanced pic that looks right and doesn't exhaust the dynamic range of the camera (ie. all the tones and colours).

The choice is usually based upon the mid-point of all light in the pic, ie. bits of dark, bits of light, but not one predominantly dark or light bit, the camera will be fine and go for the middle.

As your pic has loads of light stuff in it (big white sky, headlights, reg plate), its chosen to knock the average down a bit so the white gets exposed properly. Because of this the dark bits are very dark. Hence you can't see your wheels.

My suggestion earlier was to over-ride the cameras choice and manually over-expose the pic. Basically ignore the cameras opinion of what will look right and up the average yourself. The sky will go very bright indeed but no worry, thats not as important as seeing your wheels.

As a side note, brighter pics means slower shutter, which normally means shake unless you support the camera ideally on a wall or something, or most ideally on a tripod.

[Edited on 24-02-2006 by Ian]

 
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