Ian_W said:
Excellent photos - feel free to add your settings to the photos - personally I like to see what ISO, focal length, speed etc., are for the photos - helps us not so confident ones to recreate similar images
Download Opanda's EXIF Information viewer. When it's all installed, you can just right click on an image and view the EXIF data - I leave all mine intact even when I'm posting here - so you'll be able to see what I edited it with as well as what I used to shoot it!
Here's a sample of the amount of info which is encoded in one of my pictures:
[Image]
Make = Canon
Model = Canon EOS 20D
Orientation = top/left
X Resolution = 72
Y Resolution = 72
Resolution Unit = inch
Software = Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows
Date Time = 2006-04-23 14:15:14
White Point = [313/1000, 329/1000]
Primary Chromaticities = [64/100, 33/100, 21/100, 71/100, 15/100, 6/100]
YCbCr Coefficients = 299/1000, 587/1000, 114/1000
YCbCr Positioning = co-sited
Exif IFD Pointer = Offset: 412
A401 = 0
A402 = 0
A403 = 0
A406 = 0
A500 = 22/10
[Camera]
Exposure Time = 1/320"
F Number = F8
Exposure Program = Normal program
ISO Speed Ratings = 100
Exif Version = Version 2.21
Date Time Original = 2006-04-22 15:41:45
Date Time Digitized = 2006-04-22 15:41:45
Components Configuration = YCbcr
Shutter Speed Value = 8.32 TV
Aperture Value = 6 AV
Exposure Bias Value = -0.67EV
Metering Mode = Pattern
Flash = Flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode
Focal Length = 100mm
User Comment =
Flashpix Version = Version 1.0
Color Space = Uncalibrated
Exif Image Width = 595
Exif Image Height = 800
Focal Plane X Resolution = 3959.322
Focal Plane Y Resolution = 3959.322
Focal Plane Resolution Unit = inch
[GPS]
[Interoperability]
[Thumbnail Info]
Compression = JPEG Compressed (Thumbnail)
X Resolution = 72
Y Resolution = 72
Resolution Unit = inch
JPEG Interchange Format = Offset: 1146
JPEG Interchange Format Length = Length: 7213
[Thumbnail]
Thumbnail = 119 x 160
To summarise that, you can tell that I had the camera in Program (idiot) mode, and shot at f8 at 100mm for an exposure of 1/320th of a second at 100 ISO. A bright day in other words!
Rob