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How to take outdoor portraits. Taking photos outdoors is challenging. Besides dealing with people stealing your gear, insects attacking you, and property owners wanting money to let you shoot on their land, you have to worry about constantly changing sunlight. Learning how to react quickly and effectively to lighting changes is the key to producing good photos. We'll cover a few different lighting strategies, but please leave comments if you have your own techniques and experiences that you want to share. You are on your own with the insects. Lighting varies during the day Imagine that you rented a studio with nice lighting equipment, placed all the lights exactly where you wanted them, and then started taking pictures of a model. Well, that's basically what happens when you photograph outside. Remember, anyone can take one good photo given enough tries in front of a nice sunset. The sun is a light that you can't control The sun is just another light source.

The exception to this chart is cloudy weather. Comments. White balance meter. DLC Photography. Camera Exposure: Aperture, ISO & Shutter Speed. A photograph's exposure determines how light or dark an image will appear when it's been captured by your camera. Believe it or not, this is determined by just three camera settings: aperture, ISO and shutter speed (the "exposure triangle"). Mastering their use is an essential part of developing an intuition for photography. Achieving the correct exposure is a lot like collecting rain in a bucket. While the rate of rainfall is uncontrollable, three factors remain under your control: the bucket's width, the duration you leave it in the rain, and the quantity of rain you want to collect. You just need to ensure you don't collect too little ("underexposed"), but that you also don't collect too much ("overexposed"). The key is that there are many different combinations of width, time and quantity that will achieve this.

For example, for the same quantity of water, you can get away with less time in the rain if you pick a bucket that's really wide. Each setting controls exposure differently: Understanding White Balance. White balance (WB) is the process of removing unrealistic color casts, so that objects which appear white in person are rendered white in your photo. Proper camera white balance has to take into account the "color temperature" of a light source, which refers to the relative warmth or coolness of white light.

Our eyes are very good at judging what is white under different light sources, but digital cameras often have great difficulty with auto white balance (AWB) — and can create unsightly blue, orange, or even green color casts. Understanding digital white balance can help you avoid these color casts, thereby improving your photos under a wider range of lighting conditions. Color Cast Daylight White Balance Color temperature describes the spectrum of light which is radiated from a "blackbody" with that surface temperature. Relative intensity has been normalized for each temperature (in Kelvins). The first three white balances allow for a range of color temperatures. Automatic White Balance. Diffusion – Reflection in photography taking portraits outdoors | DigitalPixels.net - Photography Blog.