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I managed to take photo in my house, with the effect of people moving looking blur.

I nvr change the settings and went outdoor. It was sunny.

And my camera screen appeared white, means too bright. When i lower the brightness, the moving effect wasnt achieved.

How do i make people walking look like rushing in my photograph in bright outdoor?

And what is NR??

2007-05-05 21:10:30 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

6 answers

Which camera do you use?
-.Choose a smaller aperture (a higher value) , which lets less light through, in combination with the same shutter speed used in your house. If you still have overexposed photos, lower the ISO settings or use a grey filter to lower the amount of light which comes into your camera. .
-.Set your camera in S mode, you can choose the shutter time you prefer, in this case a long one, and the camera will choose the correct aperture. When your camera isn't able to choose a aperture or your photos are still overexposed, lower the ISO settings or use a grey filter.
-.If your camera hasn't these options use the grey filter. Below is a web link which explains the basics of shutter/aperture and exposure.
Remember using long shutter speeds while making hand held photos can cause unwanted unsharpness due to movements from your hand. Use a tripod or monopod, put the camera on a stable surface or try to hold the camera in a stable position to avoid this.

NR means noise reduction. When you take photos with long exposure time the quality of the photo will deteriorate by noise, your photo will look grainy. It depends on your sensor how much noise is produced. Your camera can correct this to a certain level, set NR to on, but it needs more processing time before the file is stored on the memory card.

2007-05-05 21:20:34 · answer #1 · answered by Schwarzadler 2 · 0 0

A good speed is about 1/8-1/15sec to produce blur you may you should try panning. Select a slower speed and follow the subject as you take the photograph. This is panning.

Also good to try: slow sync flash where you use a slow shutter speed and flash. The flash freezes the subject in motion as it fires and the long shutter speed ensures the background is blurred.

(NR)
Noise Reduction. Some cameras that offer long shutter speeds (more than 1 second) usually have a noise reduction (NR) feature that is either automatic or can be enabled in the menu. This is to help eliminate random "hot" pixels and other image noise. Can add a more time to the process as it needs to write the new image data along with the recorded image.

2007-05-05 21:29:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Wait, what? No! What do you mean, ISO rating? Film speed has always referred to sensitivity because the higher the "speed" of the film, the faster your shutter speed can be given the light level than the previous slower speed....and so on. That is why ISO is referred to as film speed. So these people you refer to are on the right track. I have not seen many people confused about this. And if they were, the misunderstanding can be easily corrected by learning the correct meaning of the terminology - not by changing the terminology. Personally, I don't like referring to image sensor sensitivity as "ISO". The terminology should be signal to noise, as ISO was a standard specifically adopted for film speed - to ease confusion. But, ISO is an familiar standard that the industry has retained. And I live with it. to add.... Okay, so I get what you are saying. But, for me, the only way I use the term rating together with ISO is when I rate a roll to a different speed - as in, pushing or pulling. I guess it doesn't matter how you say it, but speed where ISO is concerned is a relevant association.

2016-05-21 08:29:56 · answer #3 · answered by nichole 3 · 0 0

To make the people look like they're rushing by (blurred look) use a lower shutter speed.

To lower the brightness of the great outdoors you need to make your aperture smaller so less light is coming in.

Combine the two and you'll get the pic you want. You'll have to fiddle with the numbers to get the right one.

NR??? no idea

2007-05-05 21:21:05 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If it is bright outside, you won't be able to get the shutter speed slow enough without severe over-exposure. You will need to cut down on the light somehow. Either shoot at dusk before the sun sets, or use a dark filter over your lens. A 3 or 4 stop neutral density filter combined with a small aperture might do the trick.

2007-05-09 19:07:53 · answer #5 · answered by Ara57 7 · 0 0

If you taken photo inside your house ,with people moving looking blur,you have set wrong shutter speed at 1/15 seconds,why don't you use Flash,so that people won't looking blur.Outdoor set at 1/250 seconds for a Sunny day,you won't filled like camera screen appeared white.If you wanted to make people walking look like rushing,you have to use Zooming effect,either zooming out or zooming in at the faster actions,it didn't related to Shutter Speed.NR was a neutral Filter, you can get it at any camera shop.

2007-05-05 22:34:08 · answer #6 · answered by victor98_2001 4 · 0 1

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