Please don't think me rude, but I tried a little editing of some of your photographs in Photoshop Elements 4.0 and wonder if you might be able to use some similar techniques to "recover" some of the photographs that you dont think you'll get to keep?
Noise reduction, curves (using "SuperCurve" plugin) and slight sharpening for local contrast enhancement
Curves
/alan
Hi Alan! I have Elements 4 and I really like what you did with Heather's pictures. I also have Noiseware, so I understand how that works. But what do you mean about "curves"? I see that you used some kind of plug-in, so I guess that means that curves isn't standard on Elements? What exactly does it do? I couldn't really see a diff. between Heather's castle photos. Thanks!
Hi everyone.
I have been a lurker on the Photography board for a while. Over the weekend DH surprised me with an S3 IS as an early Christmas gift

! We are leaving for Disney World next week and although I plan on reading as much of the manual as possible, I was wondering if anyone could help me with some specific questions.
1. What are the best settings for the nighttime shots, whether they are of the castle or the parades? And how have everyones nighttime shots come out? I know with my last digital camera they were not so good, in fact really I probably I should not have even bothered taking them. Does the flash give you enough light say if you take a pic of the castle from Main Street?
Hi seventyone and welcome to the S3 family! We just got back from WDW late Mon. night and I'm still in the process of figuring out which photos to share with everyone. I'll have some current examples soon, but I wanted to answer some of your questions before your post gets buried.
For nighttime shots, you have a couple of options. There's NightScene and NightSnapshot on the dial. These are good when you have a stationary subject. I used NightSnapshot to get a photo of my DH in front of the Christmas tree in the WL lobby. The flash goes off to light the person and the shutter stays open a little longer to pick up the tree in the background. (You have to tell the person not to move after the flash goes off or else they'll be blurry.)
As far as the castle on main street, don't bother with a flash. I don't think there's flash made that's strong enough for that!

Besides, a flash would wash out all the cool colors on the castle at night. You need to use one of the night settings, but you'll also need a tripod.
I've had great results using the Sports setting for my night shots. Unfortunately, the camera automatically boosts the ISO real high, so you'll have to use Noiseware on your photos, but they tend to come out pretty nice, even hand-held.
2. What are the best settings for the fireworks? I swore I saw something about shooting fireworks when I thumbed thru the manual, but now I can't find it?!
There's a fireworks setting on the S3; I've used it, but it has such a long shutter that I really didn't like the results. Now I just use the Sports setting and end up with some really nice shots.
Like I said, I'm still figuring out which photos to upload, and I need to run a whole bunch thru noiseware. I'll post them as soon as I can. Good luck! You'll really enjoy the camera - just get out there and try a bunch of diff. settings to see what works for you.