gsgary
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2008
- Messages
- 16,143
- Reaction score
- 3,002
- Location
- Chesterfield UK
- Website
- www.gsgary.smugmug.com
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
For $120 it is not even worth doing
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The guys that I run into that are very successful with real estate photography are using Sony with a 10mm to 20mm lens and a 18mm to 50mm zoom. In camera panoramas and in camera HDRs make for speed with minimum tripod use. A tilt/shift lens or DXO are also used by some.
skieur
I was still writing the last post while you inserted this one. So, In-Camera panorama and HDR? Ive seen some guys' results from using the HDR method here, whereas 3 bracketted shots + or -2, then edit on PS. I totally like that idea but was stuck with the timeliness issue. But, you mean in-camera, right? Sony? What model?
The guys that I run into that are very successful with real estate photography are using Sony with a 10mm to 20mm lens and a 18mm to 50mm zoom. In camera panoramas and in camera HDRs make for speed with minimum tripod use. A tilt/shift lens or DXO are also used by some.
skieur
I was still writing the last post while you inserted this one. So, In-Camera panorama and HDR? Ive seen some guys' results from using the HDR method here, whereas 3 bracketted shots + or -2, then edit on PS. I totally like that idea but was stuck with the timeliness issue. But, you mean in-camera, right? Sony? What model?
Yes, I do mean in-camera panorama and HDR. In panorama you hold down the shutter and pan the scene at 12 frames per second. The camera then stitches the shots together to produce a panorama. For HDR it shoots bracketed shots at high speed and then blends them together in camera. The best is the Sony A77.
The advantage is speed and the lack of need for a tripod or additional software and time is money.
skieur
I was still writing the last post while you inserted this one. So, In-Camera panorama and HDR? Ive seen some guys' results from using the HDR method here, whereas 3 bracketted shots + or -2, then edit on PS. I totally like that idea but was stuck with the timeliness issue. But, you mean in-camera, right? Sony? What model?
Yes, I do mean in-camera panorama and HDR. In panorama you hold down the shutter and pan the scene at 12 frames per second. The camera then stitches the shots together to produce a panorama. For HDR it shoots bracketed shots at high speed and then blends them together in camera. The best is the Sony A77.
The advantage is speed and the lack of need for a tripod or additional software and time is money.
skieur
. Tripod solves that easily and makes for sharper images.