Thank you, William.  You are right: difficult lighting is just plain  
difficult.

The speck on the subject's face is definitely white.  Also, I looked  
at the negative.  There seems to be a speck on the neg.  It is  
difficult to tell for sure, though.

Glen

On Oct 3, 2007, at 9:45 AM, William Robb wrote:

>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Glen Tortorella"
> Subject: Disappointing Results
>
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Since I have a new, more "advanced" body, the N80, I tried taking
>> some shots I would have avoided in the past.  The results were  
>> awful--
>> not one good shot on the entire role, a miserable 0-for-24 (Kodak
>> Gold 200).
>>
>> In the past, I would avoid two types of shots: 1) indoor shots and 2)
>> outdoor "high sun" shots in the fair weather months (i.e. during the
>> hours of about 10:00-4:00).  In doing so, I have assured myself
>> decent, but not necessarily perfect, results.  Since the N80 has a
>> better metering system (10-segment) and a pop-up flash that is
>> supposed to be pretty good, I figured: "let me see what it can do."
>> As I have said, the results were dreadful.  Here are the main issues.
>>
>> 1) Every indoor flash shot showed at least moderate spotlight/wash-
>> out effect of the subject (people).
>> 2) On the outdoor "high sun" shots, the camera turned a seemingly
>> minor shadows (through the viewfinder) on the subject's face into a
>> black blobs that covered almost all of the subject's face.
>> 3) When taking indoor shots with the flash, I would meter (10-
>> segment) something like 1/30 or 1/45 or perhaps 1/60 at, say, f2.
>> With the flash powered up, I do not think it ever metered
>> differently.  For example, 1/30 at f/2 was still 1/30 at f/2 with the
>> flash enabled.  Is this correct, or is there something wrong with my
>> camera?
>> 4) The one decent shot in the whole role--an indoor shot using only
>> available light...go figure?--was spoiled by some sort of small speck
>> on the subject's face.  I usually keep my filter free of dust, etc.
>> Could this speck have appeared as a result of the cheap processing I
>> used (Wal-Mart C-41)?
>>
>> I know that using a fill flash may have alleviated the problem
>> expressed in issue number 2, but, since I have had my subjects turn a
>> bit ghastly by using the flash, I am hesitant to use it indoors or
>> outdoors.  I would appreciate any advice or commentary (or even pep
>> talk), as I am pretty down about this.  What good is a more
>> "advanced" camera if I cannot even come remotely close to
>> satisfactory results on the more difficult shots (i.e. indoor, "high
>> sun," etc.)?
>
> You seem to have discovered one of the rules of photography that I  
> like the
> best, which is that good equipment can't compensate for bad  
> photography.
> Difficult lighting situations are difficult because of their  
> nature, not
> because of less than savvy cameras.
> Was the spot on the subject's face white or black?
> If it's white, it's dust on the film at the time of printing, which  
> isn't a
> big deal, if it's black, then it's dust on the film at the moment of
> exposure.
>
> William Robb
>
>
> -- 
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> [email protected]
> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
> to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above  
> and follow the directions.


-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to