Marshall,
Advise from someone who obviously knows what the're talking about.
I was't to happy with the 3D quality of the Bahai shots and you have
shown me the error of my ways. I look forward to applying your
suggestions in future such situations.
Thanks again, Bill
This would be better as a mono view. The temple, taken from a distance looses most of its stereopsis. To get a goodidea of how to shoot buildings and other large objects, study Dariush's postings. The lower portion of builing andrelated grounds are dark, due to camera meter being fooled by strong lighting from sky, and making camera compensateby underexposing.One way to overcome this is to aim the camera at some object that is about the same distance as the main subject andalso aim more toward the ground. Then depress the shutter button halfway to "hold" the focus and exposure reading.Re-compose picture, and depress the shutter button all the way.This probably won't always work for cha-chas, since in the time it takes to make two separate exposures, many changesmay occur. In that case, if your camera's exposure can be manually altered, set to over-expose by one step, and thenshoot as described above. If that can't be done, perhaps corrections can be made with your image editor.Marshall__________ NOD32 2597 (20071017) Information __________----- Original Message -----From: William SilvermanSent: Wednesday, October 17, 2007 12:58 AMSubject: [Anaglyphs] Bahai Temple in Chicago, picture 1Absolutely stunning architecture of the Bahai Temple in Chicago. Even more impressive than Mr. Weinny!
Bill Silverman
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