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Old 11-21-2008, 07:28 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Delphinus View Post
Really? Wow, I'm impressed. I noticed the shutter speed on the octopus shot was 1/3s ... I would never be able to hold a camera still enough freehand, and it's perfect clarity in the picture, the octopus didn't even move in that time ... totally impressed.

Do you have a remote for shutter release then? Even the act of pressing the shutter release gives me a tiny bit of camera shake, anything slower than 1/30s is pretty much a gamble for me. ..

So, any tips you could share? (Pretty please?!)

... And I feel oblivious, I don't see the lady in the background of the octopus shot. I stared and stared .. must be missing something .. I'm going to go look again now ...
The lady in the background is making a victory sign. I was going to clone it out in PS but got lazy :P The octo shot wasn't actually freehand per say. I rested the on the concrete frame of the viewing window and held it firmly in place. You can also hold the lens against the viewing panel firmly to achieve this kind of stability. Something you might want to try next time you need to shoot really slow is the 2 second timer on the shutter. This will fire the shutter 2 second after you press it so that the button pressing will not move the camera during exposure.
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Old 11-21-2008, 07:32 PM
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Originally Posted by spoot View Post
Something you might want to try next time you need to shoot really slow is the 2 second timer on the shutter. This will fire the shutter 2 second after you press it so that the button pressing will not move the camera during exposure.
This is a good tip... I'll have to try it. With my crappy little camera I need all the tips I can get
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Old 11-21-2008, 07:47 PM
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I used to do that trick with my old 35mm. To show what a complete tool that I am though, I can't find out how to do it with my current digital camera (mine is the D70s). I tried googling the info but all I could find was wireless remote shutter controllers.
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Old 11-21-2008, 11:23 PM
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Tony, there is a button by the top LCD to change the shutter settings on the camera. One of the settings is a timer, but to set the timer duration you have to go into the shooting menu (i think).
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Old 11-22-2008, 12:37 AM
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does anyone know how old octo is? how long has the aquarium had this guy?
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