Showing posts with label Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rose. Show all posts

Friday, July 30, 2010

An update on the contest! 
The contest has now been simplified i.e. you can participate only by subscribing to Pixellicious Photos and writing a comment on the contest post! It is as simple as that.

Good News for the contest participants! 
I will be sharing on Facebook and Twitter about the blog / website with the respective links of all the participants. This will ensure that the participant's blog / website is exposed to more than 1800 potential visitors. So that makes it one more reason just to participate. Of course the winners will be receiving a 180 days advertisement package as mentioned in the Contest Post.

So Subscribe Now to Participate..  

Enter your email address:


Delivered by FeedBurner

An about the latest post.... I have always been trying to figure out how to get photos of a quality that can be good enough, that you can sell them on stock photos website. If you have ever tried to upload and sell photos on sites like Crestock, Pixmac, Dreamstime, Shutter stock, Yay micro etc, then you would know that more photos get rejected than accepted. So, when it is more likely that a majority of photos shot using a DSLR camera will get selected, how can you get that perfect photo using a low-end camera, a point and shoot camera of over 6 mega pixels capacity?
I tried to experiment with my canon A710 IS a 6.1 megapixel camera for various results and figured out that although the camera has a 6x optical zoom, the photos that I capture using the full or part optical zoom are not as sharper as the ones I capture with the zooming feature. Also the photos captured from very close and via Macro mode gives me the best results of all. One just has to set the camera to that perfect exposure & shutter settings.

Below are some photos of a few flowers captured on a cloudy day inside the house with lights off. The only source of light was the one coming from the textured window glass from outside. The camera was set to shutter priority mode with a 1 second exposure to ensure enough of the light reflected from the flowers got captured. I placed the camera down, near the flowers, very close and captured the below photos using the macro mode. I am quite glad to see the results. No grains, no haze, and perfectly sharp captures.

Well experiments can sure teach you a lot! I would be glad to hear about your experiments with camera and experience of selling photos…

Flower Photography

An update on the contest! 
The contest has now been simplified i.e. you can participate only by subscribing to Pixellicious Photos and writing a comment on the contest post! It is as simple as that.

Good News for the contest participants! 
I will be sharing on Facebook and Twitter about the blog / website with the respective links of all the participants. This will ensure that the participant's blog / website is exposed to more than 1800 potential visitors. So that makes it one more reason just to participate. Of course the winners will be receiving a 180 days advertisement package as mentioned in the Contest Post.

So Subscribe Now to Participate..  

Enter your email address:


Delivered by FeedBurner

An about the latest post.... I have always been trying to figure out how to get photos of a quality that can be good enough, that you can sell them on stock photos website. If you have ever tried to upload and sell photos on sites like Crestock, Pixmac, Dreamstime, Shutter stock, Yay micro etc, then you would know that more photos get rejected than accepted. So, when it is more likely that a majority of photos shot using a DSLR camera will get selected, how can you get that perfect photo using a low-end camera, a point and shoot camera of over 6 mega pixels capacity?
I tried to experiment with my canon A710 IS a 6.1 megapixel camera for various results and figured out that although the camera has a 6x optical zoom, the photos that I capture using the full or part optical zoom are not as sharper as the ones I capture with the zooming feature. Also the photos captured from very close and via Macro mode gives me the best results of all. One just has to set the camera to that perfect exposure & shutter settings.

Below are some photos of a few flowers captured on a cloudy day inside the house with lights off. The only source of light was the one coming from the textured window glass from outside. The camera was set to shutter priority mode with a 1 second exposure to ensure enough of the light reflected from the flowers got captured. I placed the camera down, near the flowers, very close and captured the below photos using the macro mode. I am quite glad to see the results. No grains, no haze, and perfectly sharp captures.

Well experiments can sure teach you a lot! I would be glad to hear about your experiments with camera and experience of selling photos…