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Post by Picap on Nov 10, 2019 5:33:02 GMT
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Post by Picap on Nov 10, 2019 5:43:45 GMT
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Post by Picap on Nov 10, 2019 5:54:29 GMT
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Post by elasticheart on Nov 10, 2019 8:02:17 GMT
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Post by Tracey on Nov 10, 2019 9:52:30 GMT
Some of those pictures look orange. But most of them are great
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Post by capsbestgirl on Nov 10, 2019 12:45:56 GMT
Some of those pictures look orange. But most of them are great Sadly that's the lighting - a bit of tinkering with Photoshop will change that, but I haven't got time to do it now sadly!
Thanks to all for posting these!
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Post by Bob on Nov 10, 2019 12:50:22 GMT
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Post by capsbestgirl on Nov 10, 2019 14:51:07 GMT
I'm back with my usual question. Is it worth creating a new thread in events for this? Personally I would say yes. It's a separate event, although still releated to the movie Thanks to elasticheart for all your hard work!
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Post by elasticheart on Nov 10, 2019 15:31:46 GMT
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Post by Picap on Nov 10, 2019 18:44:01 GMT
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Post by dawnofthenewathens on Nov 10, 2019 18:49:42 GMT
It's not just the lightning, but also digital zoom which causes photos to lose quality. They look grainy. Optical zoom is the way to go in terms of quality, but smartphones don't have that. There are some high-end smartphones from this year that impliment a technological solution for this. But these smartphones are really expensive and the shape of smartphones is a limitation for optical zoom. Unless you take a lot of photos with your phone, it's not worth the investment if you ask me.
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Post by Picap on Nov 10, 2019 19:12:09 GMT
It's not just the lightning, but also digital zoom which causes photos to lose quality. They look grainy. Optical zoom is the way to go in terms of quality, but smartphones don't have that. There are some high-end smartphones from this year that impliment a technological solution for this. But these smartphones are really expensive and the shape of smartphones is a limitation for optical zoom. Unless you take a lot of photos with your phone, it's not worth the investment if you ask me. I know almost everyone is attached to their phone for everything but if you want good quality photos - bring a camera. My almost 10+ year old digital takes far better photos.
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Post by Tracey on Nov 10, 2019 19:35:09 GMT
Thanks for all the hard work everyone. I appreciate it
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Post by Picap on Nov 10, 2019 20:23:21 GMT
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Post by dawnofthenewathens on Nov 10, 2019 20:35:03 GMT
It's not just the lightning, but also digital zoom which causes photos to lose quality. They look grainy. Optical zoom is the way to go in terms of quality, but smartphones don't have that. There are some high-end smartphones from this year that impliment a technological solution for this. But these smartphones are really expensive and the shape of smartphones is a limitation for optical zoom. Unless you take a lot of photos with your phone, it's not worth the investment if you ask me. I know almost everyone is attached to their phone for everything but if you want good quality photos - bring a camera. My almost 10+ year old digital takes far better photos. Yes, agreed. Almost any phone will take great pictures in easy lightning (e.g. sunlight), but artifical lightning is a lot more complicated. Even an old small digital camera like mine takes better pictures in artifical lightning than my phone does.
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