Camaro5 Chevy Camaro Forum / Camaro ZL1, SS and V6 Forums - Camaro5.com
 
TireRack
Go Back   Camaro5 Chevy Camaro Forum / Camaro ZL1, SS and V6 Forums - Camaro5.com > General Camaro Forums > Camaro Photos | Spyshots | Video | Media Gallery


Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 12-24-2011, 02:18 PM   #43
SSTG
 
Drives: 2014 Z51 Corvette
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ofallon, Mo.
Posts: 5,822
SSTG is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2011, 05:20 PM   #44
TaylorRyanSS
COTW: 12/13/10
 
TaylorRyanSS's Avatar
 
Drives: 1969 Camaro
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 7,880
The orange is off and has a greenish tint on some parts. I tried but I need a higher res pic, it is getting pixelated. Here the first one with a touch of more orange. This is how IOM looks in real life in the bright sun.
Attached Images
 
__________________

"Are you one of those boys who prefer cars to women? - I'm one of those boys that appreciates a fine body, regardless of the make."
1969 CAMARO JOURNAL: http://www.camaro5.com/forums/showthread.php?t=341239 | FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/taylor.ryan.apt | GRAPHIC DESIGN: www.aptdesigns.net
TaylorRyanSS is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2011, 06:33 PM   #45
SSTG
 
Drives: 2014 Z51 Corvette
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ofallon, Mo.
Posts: 5,822
I see it now, yes. I will keep trying! Lol.
SSTG is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-25-2011, 10:53 AM   #46
Parabolica
Account Suspended
 
Drives: 2011 2SS
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: CA.
Posts: 309
I think you still need to work on your angles and watch you backgrounds. You need to find better locations for one. This will allow you to go wider and incorporate some of the background so all your shots aren't so tight.

If you don't mind, I'll share what I don't like about these:
Quote:
Originally Posted by SSTG View Post
I don't find this to be a terribly flattering angle. IMO, the Camaro looks best from the 3/4 view, front and back. Here there are just too many distractions as well. The shot starts with grass, then concrete and finally asphalt. The cars is too high in the frame, with more grass, buildings, houses and a pole coming out of the roof of the car. The shot is just way to busy...

Quote:
Originally Posted by SSTG View Post
Personally, I think this is one of your best (although I think I'd come around a little more to the left and not have the tire turned out so much). Try and separate the car from the background, don't park it right up against a wall (unless the wall is complimentary to the shot, like a graffiti wall or similar industrial look). Remember, the car is the subject, so try and isolate it. Again, watch your framing. Here the frame is greater in the back than the front. Generally it's a little more pleasing to leave more space in front of the car.

Quote:
Originally Posted by SSTG View Post
This isn't too bad either, but I think you could have gone in tighter on the wheel and Camaro so there's more of a subject. Again, watch your frame! The light pole coming off the front fender is distracting.

I see you're using a kodak Z710. As far as the color goes, your White Balance is probably set to "Auto". Try setting it manually for the conditions (ie: Sunny, Cloudy etc.) and see if that helps get more consistent colors. You'll also want to have the metering mode set to Multi-Pattern (but these are things you need to experiment with to get the most out of your camera).

Hope that helps!

Keep 'em coming!!!
Parabolica is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-25-2011, 11:10 AM   #47
vexss2010

 
vexss2010's Avatar
 
Drives: 2016 Summit White 2SS
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Janesville,Wisconsin
Posts: 1,340
well i use HDR and yes it all depends on how u use it...I admit when I first used it the pics came out way too saturated..but I think im getting better at it...
Attached Images
 
vexss2010 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-25-2011, 11:49 AM   #48
SSTG
 
Drives: 2014 Z51 Corvette
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ofallon, Mo.
Posts: 5,822
Quote:
Originally Posted by Parabolica View Post
I think you still need to work on your angles and watch you backgrounds. You need to find better locations for one. This will allow you to go wider and incorporate some of the background so all your shots aren't so tight.

If you don't mind, I'll share what I don't like about these:


I don't find this to be a terribly flattering angle. IMO, the Camaro looks best from the 3/4 view, front and back. Here there are just too many distractions as well. The shot starts with grass, then concrete and finally asphalt. The cars is too high in the frame, with more grass, buildings, houses and a pole coming out of the roof of the car. The shot is just way to busy...




Personally, I think this is one of your best (although I think I'd come around a little more to the left and not have the tire turned out so much). Try and separate the car from the background, don't park it right up against a wall (unless the wall is complimentary to the shot, like a graffiti wall or similar industrial look). Remember, the car is the subject, so try and isolate it. Again, watch your framing. Here the frame is greater in the back than the front. Generally it's a little more pleasing to leave more space in front of the car.



This isn't too bad either, but I think you could have gone in tighter on the wheel and Camaro so there's more of a subject. Again, watch your frame! The light pole coming off the front fender is distracting.

I see you're using a kodak Z710. As far as the color goes, your White Balance is probably set to "Auto". Try setting it manually for the conditions (ie: Sunny, Cloudy etc.) and see if that helps get more consistent colors. You'll also want to have the metering mode set to Multi-Pattern (but these are things you need to experiment with to get the most out of your camera).

Hope that helps!

Keep 'em coming!!!

Thank you!
SSTG is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2011, 10:13 PM   #49
Blitz
 
Blitz's Avatar
 
Drives: 2012 CTS-V Sedan
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 738
I just need to learn how to use my Nikon D80 off of 'Auto' mode. I keep playing around with it and hoping to get lucky, but my best pics still are when I let the camera do the work.

I know the manual mode is better if I can learn how to use it!

(So in a way, photography is just very similar to a car, auto is easy and gets the job done, manual is better if you know how to do it right... ok back on topic, don't detour the thread to "another one of these discussions"!)
__________________

Blitz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2011, 10:43 PM   #50
SSmoked

 
SSmoked's Avatar
 
Drives: '12 Camaro ZL1 #1255
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: O' Canada
Posts: 1,279
Get familar with the Rule of thirds
http://www.digital-photography-schoo...rule-of-thirds

Im still learning each day with photography but practise makes perfect, just keep at it, and it will come. Im personaly a fan of high quality looking shots, which is what i aim to achieve, without the usage of photoshop(which i eventully will get me hands on).
Just some of my shots from the summer, maby give the OP and other some ideas of angles, even tho its not a camaro (no hating my SS/TC please). Ill have some nice shots of the ZL1 when it arrives next year.



__________________
SSmoked is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-27-2011, 09:18 AM   #51
jcamere94z28

 
jcamere94z28's Avatar
 
Drives: None
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Miami, FL
Posts: 1,268
SSTG,

If you really want to learn how to take good photos... 1st stay away from over-complicated post processing (HDR) included. For now at least. Learn your basics... learn the tool (your camera). Learn about what makes your camera tick and work properly, learn about light and learn about composition. Once you know the rules... you can start to break them.

I think I can give you some pointers as far as car photography. Check out these samples:







Some quick pointers:
  • Stay away from shooting on mid day conditions (close to sunset or right after sunrise)
  • avoid clutter (take a close look at your background)
  • keep it simple (simple backgrounds work best when you are starting up)
  • be careful with your angles (don't get to crazy with them)
  • no wideangle lenses (usually for cars).
  • Give the photo some breathing room, you can always crop later but it's much harder to go the other way around.
  • Post-processing is only that. If you take a bad photo and then post-process it you will end up with a bad photo with post-processing. Take a great photo and Post-process it... and then you end up with work of art.
  • Have fun!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Parabolica View Post
Austin, I think you missed the point of my post. I agree: post-processing is a part of photography; always has been, always will. A lot of people don't realize that many of the tools in Photoshop come directly from the darkroom (dodging, burning, masking, to name a few). As I'm sure you know, the techniques involved in the fashion industry require an in-depth knowledge of the software and hours of highly skilled labor. The models are generally well lit and well photographed (proper exposure, composition, depth of field, etc.) to begin with as well. There's a big difference between skilled editing (or darkroom work) on a good photograph, and using a plugin on a snapshot. In fact, 'good' editing takes enough skill that it is often farmed out to someone like yourself that specializes in it.

What bothers me is that people new to photography spend more time on their computers trying to figure out how to make bad pictures look good instead of using that time to learn how to take good pictures. That's the point I was trying to make: if you want good photographs, learn how to take good photographs. If you have to rely on plugins to make your photographs look, 'interesting', you haven't learned how to take photographs.

Our eyes and brains are truly remarkable things. We can view a dynamic range that is almost limitless; cameras can't. HDR is supposed to be a tool used to get around the limitations of film or digital sensors. I can appreciate good advertorial HDR work (some of Fiscus' stuff comes to mind), but unfortunately, most HDR I see is just garbage.

This is a shot I took in Canyonlands Utah and an example of a scene that lends itself to HDR:


Though easily viewed with the human eye, the dynamic range of this scene far exceeds what a digital sensor is capable of capturing in a single exposure. In this scene if you expose for the sky, the inside of the cave would be pitch black. If you expose for the inside of the cave, the sky will blowout. Grad filters won't work because of the features on both sides of the frame which are above the horizon.

For this scene I chose not to use HDR and just blended 3 exposures by hand (1 for the sky, 1 for the cave and 1 for the hillside on the right).

The OP asked how he can make his pics look better. I guess I was just hoping he meant by improving his 'photography' skills...

I didn't mean to be an ass; I've just seen a ton of crap HDR lately.
QFT!!! I couldn't say it any better.

There is a time and place for HDR... but most of the HDR we see out there isn't the proper use of HDR. What Parabolica posted here... now that's a GOOD example of HDR.

Last edited by jcamere94z28; 12-27-2011 at 09:31 AM.
jcamere94z28 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-27-2011, 09:22 AM   #52
woodstock
 
woodstock's Avatar
 
Drives: 2012 Corvette Grand Sport
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: martinez Ga.
Posts: 503
Quote:
Originally Posted by Envy View Post
These are all key components to good photography but I learned my most important lesson from a National Geographic photographer. I asked him how he took all those great photographs and he laughed and said it's all in the numbers honey. He then told me that the average NG photographer took 40,000 pictures for every one that was published.

And although your composition and backdrop are lacking...I can tell your biggest problem is that you're not taking enough pictures from enough different angles to get the best shots.

Here's various pics that I have taken...and only one is photoshopped. But I took a bunch just to get the occasional one that I like. So keep clicking...

















Beautiful shots Ms.Envy!
woodstock is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-17-2012, 07:07 PM   #53
tBowBaggins
2011 Camaro SS1
 
Drives: 2011 Camaro SS1
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Greenwood, Indiana
Posts: 54
Instagram is a great, quick method for getting some cool shots. If you have an iPhone.
If you use it hit me up, I'm tBowBaggins on there as well.
tBowBaggins is offline   Reply With Quote
 
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
How to make your own signature banner DevilsReject97 Camaro Photoshops / Renderings Forum 36 12-22-2017 09:28 PM
Whats better than a 2011 ZR1? How about 5 of them! (many pics) gofast908z Cosmetic Maintenance: Washing, Waxing, Detailing, Bodywork, Protection 14 02-27-2012 01:29 PM
an awesome day on the pacific coast highway (aka my camaro review, long, pics) diddiyo Camaro Photos | Spyshots | Video | Media Gallery 10 07-08-2010 07:54 PM
The first week with un-pink camaro! (a review with pics) pinkcamaro10 5th Gen Camaro SS LS LT General Discussions 31 07-02-2009 07:54 PM
NAIAS Detroit - My Impressions + pics n vids marticus24 Camaro Photos | Spyshots | Video | Media Gallery 25 01-31-2009 04:14 AM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:45 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.