English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I want to take a picture/portrait for Christmas cards with our tree in the background, but i want it to be slightly blurred.

2006-12-04 09:35:59 · 7 answers · asked by GIG45TXFL 3 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

or is this even possible? I don't have any extra equipment/lenses, just a casio exilim zsomething.

2006-12-04 09:43:22 · update #1

i don't understand what telephoto is. The camera is a casio exilim z57

2006-12-04 11:17:29 · update #2

7 answers

I agree with the last poster, your camera is a point and shoot type, not capable of manually setting it to a different aperture. I would recommend downloading some free software, or using the one that came with your camera - most of them come with a "blur" tool, which will give it an unfocused look. Good luck!

2006-12-05 04:40:29 · answer #1 · answered by myaddictiontofire 5 · 0 0

first element - DO go appropriate type and don't purchase a refurb. it relatively is the previous 'pay now or pay later' argument. yet another element - pixels are no longer as significant as style of sensors. After 4-5 pixels it would not make a lot distinction except you plan on blowing up photos to mural length, wherein case you will choose ten or greater. yet evaluate style of sensors interior the physique - that's what delivers optimal clarity and intensity of field, besides as specific result suggestions. needless to say, the greater sensors, the greater you are going to pay. i'm keen on Canon, nonetheless Minolta and Olympus make outstanding cameras. Canon riot is a sturdy SLR, nonetheless it won't provide you the value and adaptability for authentic expert high quality photos. For which you will could pony-up for the expert D sequence. Lenses on my own will set you lower back a grand or greater. all of it comes all the way down to what you elect to do and how extreme you're. activity - the riot or equivalent will serve you effective. professional - you pays the vast greenbacks. and that i strongly advise against paying for off EBay or comparable sites. hit upon an excellent broker.

2016-10-04 21:16:17 · answer #2 · answered by lavinia 4 · 0 0

all wrong answers.
open up the aperture. use 5.6 or 2.8. this has a lower depth of field.
use a tripod. place the camera as close to the subject as possible (don't zoom in).
focus on the family, which should be standing a few feet in front of the tree.
light the scene normally.

2006-12-04 14:21:11 · answer #3 · answered by Becky 5 · 0 0

Tell us what exact make and model you have. Some cams are fully auto, you can't do anything. Some cams have a selection of SCENE modes that you could pick to get the effect you want. Some cams allow you to control Aperture. Most cams can zoom (at least 3x)

Unless we get more info, zoom in, reduce the light level but bright enough to avoid hand shake and subject movement.

2006-12-04 10:26:46 · answer #4 · answered by AnandaSim 1 · 0 1

the focal point causes the blurring

use a telephoto lenses and shot a close up
the background becomes blurred

2006-12-04 09:39:29 · answer #5 · answered by Irish Wander 3 · 0 0

if possible use manual focus and shoot at telephoto distances and use the biggest aperture possible.
God bless,
gabe

2006-12-04 10:38:46 · answer #6 · answered by gabegm1 4 · 0 0

your camera probaly doesn't have that capability, you need to have manual settings to achieve that

2006-12-04 19:31:26 · answer #7 · answered by micheleh29 6 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers