Garbage cans.
There is practically no spot anywhere in the theme parks for a scenic shot without a garbage can lurking somewhere in there!
Garbage cans.
There is practically no spot anywhere in the theme parks for a scenic shot without a garbage can lurking somewhere in there!
Are there things that end up in your Disney photos that you just hate?
My pet peeve is that dang Tinkerbell cable attached to the castle. I personally try and take it out of any castle photos I get.

Terrible lighting (and design that skews lighting) for indoor character meet and greets. Especially Mickey in the MK. Even the Photopass photographs look bad with incorrect white balance.
Terrible lighting (and design that skews lighting) for indoor character meet and greets. Especially Mickey in the MK. Even the Photopass photographs look bad with incorrect white balance.
Terrible lighting (and design that skews lighting) for indoor character meet and greets. Especially Mickey in the MK. Even the Photopass photographs look bad with incorrect white balance.
Story Time with Belle is especially awful, even for the PhotoPass photos. I'm guessing they have some excuse in there, though, because the low blue lighting probably has something to do with the Lumier animatronic character.Terrible lighting (and design that skews lighting) for indoor character meet and greets. Especially Mickey in the MK. Even the Photopass photographs look bad with incorrect white balance.
Maybe it's not true across the board....but I've asked Photopass shooters on two separate occasions about their settings and both times they were totally uninformed and just had things set up for them on some basic settings that they really couldn't even articulate (and I didn't want to ask to see their camera).
Maybe it's not true across the board....but I've asked Photopass shooters on two separate occasions about their settings and both times they were totally uninformed and just had things set up for them on some basic settings that they really couldn't even articulate (and I didn't want to ask to see their camera).
Someone posted that they are on strict orders to keep their D90's on Auto only, and if you hand them your D90 (if you have the same camera), you have to explicitly tell them to leave your settings because its an ingrained habit to check /switch back to Auto. (I don't think its a highly paid gig, so Disney would rather them concentrate on OK framing.
But yes, it's annoying they can't set a custom white balance like I can on my PnS.
People. Way too man of them. I wish they'd just all leave and let me take all my photos with nobody in the way.![]()
Maybe it's not true across the board....but I've asked Photopass shooters on two separate occasions about their settings and both times they were totally uninformed and just had things set up for them on some basic settings that they really couldn't even articulate (and I didn't want to ask to see their camera).
LOL