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ME Corp Heliman Location:
| Nice Pictures!Great job, hey were allways in a learning curve I think!
The pictures are great, you can alter the mood of the shots by varying the time of day you shoot.
Experiment with morning shots which add a softer light or early evening shots. Remember in some cases shadows will make your rooflines and textures stand out more! Also,, take into account that sidelighting reveals texture, Backlighting stresses depth and frontlighting shows off detail. Plan ahead for the picture. In cases when a client calls for a picture of a building when the shot will be facing North or South gives me less options than Buildings facing to the East or West etc..
ALSO... If your digital camera has bracketing you can choose the option. We use the Sony CD-500 and often set it to bracketing if the lighting is tough on us. In our case we shoot an average of 30 pictures in 10 minutes and that means numerous camera angles and lighting angles as well. Bracketing will shoot a duplicate picture for you at a different setting, giving you more choices to pick from later. As a rule of thumb.. When you crop or edit a picture digitally you will lose some clarity because of the change in pixels. TIFF files are rather large but will almost guarantee you have the same resolution at any size of print. I usually go Jpeg for most clients because one picture in TIFF will average 10MB used on my disk!
Im hardly an expert and aerial photography is still new to me as well....Lets all learn together!
Good luck! |
| 05-19-2004 Over year old. | | | |