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I am going to be going out and taking landscape photo's of Columbus Ohio. Anyone have any pointers on apeture? shutter speed? locations? I may be taking b&w's as well any tips will help.

2007-02-04 23:35:53 · 3 answers · asked by startpipin 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

3 answers

The golden rule for landscape photography is small aperture, which might mean slow shutter speed, so put your camera on a tripod. Can't help with locations, sorry. I assume you are using film, rather than digital - there is no point in taking digital pics in black and white. That being the case, use at least a yellow filter for skies, and if you want really dramatic cloudscapes, a red one. Oh yes, the other golden rule - landscape photographs are best taken at the beginning and end of the day - the light is much better.

2007-02-05 00:31:56 · answer #1 · answered by rdenig_male 7 · 2 0

For nice sharp landscape photos, keep the apeture somewhere between f8 - f11. And focus onto a point of interest in the distance instead of focusing into the distance. For shutter speed, let the camera work it out for itself by setting it to apeture priority mode.

2007-02-05 00:36:28 · answer #2 · answered by Piano Man 4 · 1 0

I can't tell by your Q if you mean pictures in lanscpape mode or pictures of the lands cape around you which could include a portrait framed image as well.

If it is just Lanscape mode... you can shoot anything from the homeless to the citycapre of Columbus. If it is to be of Lanscapes of the City... consult the Chamber of Commerce...

beaux

2007-02-05 01:41:08 · answer #3 · answered by beauxPatrick 4 · 0 0

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