DemonLlama
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2000
- Messages
- 4,021
Well, DD's birthday party this evening at the ice rink resulted in one resounding realization for me:
I know NOTHING.
Thought I'd set the white balance for the rink, but I must have gone the wrong way.
Every picture is yellow.
The lighting in the rink (high, flourescent, and generally gray) made me think I should up the ISO, but of course the noise is considerable.
I have yellow noise.
I shot with the RAW + Jpg setting, thinking I could compare the two and make changes to the RAW at will.
Now I have what looks like two identical pictures for each, and have yet to figure out the software that came with the camera so I can change things. I can SEE them, but haven't figured out the edit features.
Also new, I've got Photoshop 7 and don't even know the first thing about it. Looked in the "Help" just for white balance and it's not even listed.
I shot 37 pictures, with tons of time on the battery just changing around the settings, and saw only one mark left on the battery at the end of the evening.
Is it just that the camera is an energy hog and I'm going to need to get 10 batteries a day for Disney World? Or did the battery come only partially charged? (But it showed full when I put it in yesterday. . .)
Hrumph.
I say again: I know nothing.
No, wait, I do know something. I should have bought the 18-125. I miss that zoom something terrible.
Have I whined enough?
yeah, I know.
I have a great new camera and just need some time to figure it out.
If anyone can give me some pointers, the more specific and "for-dummies" the better! Here is one sample from tonight's attempt.
Yellow, noisy, blurry, you name it. What should I keep in mind for next time?
Oh, and I guess it's the compression, but making them smaller makes them WORSE.
Here is a resized, awful pic:
And here is link to the uploaded larger one (still really bad, but not as. . .)
http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2003-6/253829/samspin.jpg
I'm going to take a page from Scarlett and declare "Tomorrow is another day" and hope that the soccer field in the morning is a little less demoralizing for this newbie.
I know NOTHING.
Thought I'd set the white balance for the rink, but I must have gone the wrong way.
Every picture is yellow.
The lighting in the rink (high, flourescent, and generally gray) made me think I should up the ISO, but of course the noise is considerable.
I have yellow noise.
I shot with the RAW + Jpg setting, thinking I could compare the two and make changes to the RAW at will.
Now I have what looks like two identical pictures for each, and have yet to figure out the software that came with the camera so I can change things. I can SEE them, but haven't figured out the edit features.
Also new, I've got Photoshop 7 and don't even know the first thing about it. Looked in the "Help" just for white balance and it's not even listed.
I shot 37 pictures, with tons of time on the battery just changing around the settings, and saw only one mark left on the battery at the end of the evening.
Is it just that the camera is an energy hog and I'm going to need to get 10 batteries a day for Disney World? Or did the battery come only partially charged? (But it showed full when I put it in yesterday. . .)
Hrumph.
I say again: I know nothing.
No, wait, I do know something. I should have bought the 18-125. I miss that zoom something terrible.
Have I whined enough?


yeah, I know.
I have a great new camera and just need some time to figure it out.
If anyone can give me some pointers, the more specific and "for-dummies" the better! Here is one sample from tonight's attempt.
Yellow, noisy, blurry, you name it. What should I keep in mind for next time?
Oh, and I guess it's the compression, but making them smaller makes them WORSE.
Here is a resized, awful pic:

And here is link to the uploaded larger one (still really bad, but not as. . .)
http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2003-6/253829/samspin.jpg
I'm going to take a page from Scarlett and declare "Tomorrow is another day" and hope that the soccer field in the morning is a little less demoralizing for this newbie.