| bio | website | |
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| visits | member for | 5 months |
| seen | May 20 at 22:53 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
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May 13 |
comment |
How to deal with large exposure shifts during time lapse? You could also make the exposure of the camera based on one part of the image not changing too much (like a part in the image which is constantly in the shadow), resulting in smooth exposure changes instead of sudden and abrupt ones with change of lighting. - in your example video the tree in the corner would have been an excellent target |
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Apr 2 |
comment |
How does high speed sync mode work? Note that the shutter behaviour described is called a rolling shutter (for OP). |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Constituent |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Caucus |
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Feb 10 |
accepted | Why doesn't my camera capture a dark picture when it looks dark to the human eye? |
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Feb 5 |
comment |
Why doesn't my camera capture a dark picture when it looks dark to the human eye? Nice answer ;) Sorry Matt if I confused you, I am no native english speaker. |
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Feb 5 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Feb 5 |
awarded | Student |
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Feb 4 |
comment |
Why doesn't my camera capture a dark picture when it looks dark to the human eye? What I am asking is if the camera can sense automatically that it's just plain dark, and thus result in the EV for the image being low, similar to what a human would see. Assume that for normal light condition, we humans perceive a landscape with an equivalent for EV1. For an evening, restaurant situation we would perceive something like EV0, and at night it would be EV-2. Now I can set the camera manually to expose for a short time, but it will always by default go to EV1, or whatever, and expose for a longer duration. Is there a way to adapt its EV it choses? |
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Feb 4 |
asked | Why doesn't my camera capture a dark picture when it looks dark to the human eye? |
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Jan 24 |
comment |
Why is depth of field minimised at the max focal length of a zoom lens? Should be CoC instead of CoF (Circle of Confusion). Mixed it up with DoF unfortunately. On the wiki page you also get calculations for the depth of field. |
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Jan 24 |
comment |
Why is depth of field minimised at the max focal length of a zoom lens? The Bokeh is only caused by the circle of confusion, or the area in which a certain point is projected. You call something 'in focus' if the CoF is smaller than the pixel size. You can find information on how to calculate the size of CoF at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circle_of_confusion |
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Dec 13 |
awarded | Critic |
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Dec 13 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Dec 9 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Dec 9 |
answered | Resizing large size images retaining good quality for the web |