A4 photoshoot ***56K***NO
nice pics..sorry i dont have any advise / tips on photography -
but they look great...
my favs - #3, #5, & #8
not sure if its just me - but #4 seems like the car is out of focus?
but they look great...

my favs - #3, #5, & #8
not sure if its just me - but #4 seems like the car is out of focus?
your focus and general photo skills are there, but you need to pay more attention to lighting and composition. while those daylight pics are very clear and crisp,they're quite boring. think about what's behind your car and how you can use the background to actually add to the picture instead of looking like just extra stuff back there. also,try bringing the pics into photoshop and tweaking levels and color balance, etc to get some kind of interesting variation. flat light makes for some pretty static pics. color correction is easy and can be fun to see what you come up with.
for those supplied light pics in the garage: almost perfect. your use of a tripodis great, they're nice and crisp and the white balance seems spot on. again though, the thing you need to watch out for is your composition. all of your pictures indoors are very loose and have point-and-shoot feel to them. for example... in the first garage pic, rotate your car counterclockwise a bit, and take about 5-10 steps to your right, and zoom in a bit to compose a tighter, more purposeful shot without that distracting green door in the background. you'll have a nice clean wall to shoot against, and with the car rotated you'll get more of that overhear light to shine on your front end.
although it's easy to see that you do have skill in photography, its equally as easy to see that you've only just started with a DSLR... which is just fine. keep working on the composition of your pictures and work with your camera to kill that point and shoot look and it won't be long before you have everybody fooled into thinking you've been doing it for years. just remember touse your zoom and compose tighter.it's a progression man, and you've got a hell of a head start already. good luck, and please post updates and new shots.
for those supplied light pics in the garage: almost perfect. your use of a tripodis great, they're nice and crisp and the white balance seems spot on. again though, the thing you need to watch out for is your composition. all of your pictures indoors are very loose and have point-and-shoot feel to them. for example... in the first garage pic, rotate your car counterclockwise a bit, and take about 5-10 steps to your right, and zoom in a bit to compose a tighter, more purposeful shot without that distracting green door in the background. you'll have a nice clean wall to shoot against, and with the car rotated you'll get more of that overhear light to shine on your front end.
although it's easy to see that you do have skill in photography, its equally as easy to see that you've only just started with a DSLR... which is just fine. keep working on the composition of your pictures and work with your camera to kill that point and shoot look and it won't be long before you have everybody fooled into thinking you've been doing it for years. just remember touse your zoom and compose tighter.it's a progression man, and you've got a hell of a head start already. good luck, and please post updates and new shots.
DSLR - thanks for the comments; thats excatly the kind of tips I need. Hopefully I will learn more and more each time I do a shoot.
Everyone else - thanks for the positive comments about the car and the pictures. I aim to please
PS: Canon Digital Rebel XT. Starter DSLR but I love it. After a chip, I think Im going to get a nicer lens for it
Everyone else - thanks for the positive comments about the car and the pictures. I aim to please
PS: Canon Digital Rebel XT. Starter DSLR but I love it. After a chip, I think Im going to get a nicer lens for it



