csweatherston
Member
Registered: 16th Jan 06
Location: Devon
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Hi,
I recently got a Pentax K100d.
But i cant seem to get any photos to look good, without having it on auto.
any tips for a complete noob?
it came with an 18-55 lense.
cheers.
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Butler
Member
Registered: 2nd Jun 05
Location: London
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Anything specific you dont like about the photos that you are needing help with?
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csweatherston
Member
Registered: 16th Jan 06
Location: Devon
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every time i try with manual setting they come out over exposed...
ive managed to focus well, with lense adjustment.
just the shutter speed/ exposure etc i cant sus
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Daveskater
Premium Member
Registered: 29th Apr 08
Location: Oxford, UK Drives: Jap wagon
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Take a gander through the manual mate, should be in there. If not then try pressing buttons and going through menus etc
Numberwang!
Originally posted by AlunJ
I like you Dave, you are a man of men
Originally Whatapp'd by Neo
Dave's maybe capable of a drive-by cuddle
Look at my pictures
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Butler
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Registered: 2nd Jun 05
Location: London
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I never use manual focus at all really. As for you over exposed images, complete manual mode is exactly that. You need to compensate if the images are coming out over exposed, try a smaller aperture, quicker shutter speed, lower ISO. Check the manual to see how you change these things.
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csweatherston
Member
Registered: 16th Jan 06
Location: Devon
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can anyone explain to me the basics of iso, apperature, shutterspeed??
i have been practising around the house, but running out of subjects lol.
managed to get a nice shot of a running tap with slow shutter speed.
Also, whats the 18-55mm lense designed for? is it an allrounder?.
i have no manual or software for it.
got a good deal though.
And PS elements seems pretty good converting the raw format.
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Butler
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Registered: 2nd Jun 05
Location: London
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18-55 is pretty much all round, 18mm is alot wider than you get on normal compacts, 55mm is rubbish in terms of zoom though. Useless for motorsport photography.
Shutterspeed is quite an obvious one, longer shutter speed the longer the shutter stays open and light is allowed onto the sensor.
Higher the ISO the more sensitive the sensor is to light, you can use a quicker shutter speed wth a higher iso in darker light conditions, pictures become grainy the higher you go though so generally the lower ISO the better.
Aperture is the size of the hole infront of the shutter on the lens itself that allows the light in, the larger the aperture the more light that enters, and vice versa. Bigger apertures also mean smaller depth of field, and vice versa. Depending on the aperture you will need to compensate with ISO or shutter speed in order to correctly expose your photos. Aperture on the camera is confusing though as the smaller aperture value, the larger the hole is and vice versa.
Thats a very brief explanation off the top of my head, hope it helps if a little.
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csweatherston
Member
Registered: 16th Jan 06
Location: Devon
User status: Offline
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Thanks Butler, thats a good explanation.
so a lower aperture value lets more light in? or balance that with shutter speed?
whats a good base iso range to use 200-400??
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Butler
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Registered: 2nd Jun 05
Location: London
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That would be correct. Generally you want to be using the lowest ISO you can afford to, youll only really get away with 100 on a sunny day though.
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Chris F
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