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nope. from Hong Kong. Do you have a link of the FFVII image though because I've only given permission for one person and they used it in a Ghost in a Shell fanart.
Hong_Kong_Alley_by_3vilCrayon.jpg

my first attempt at HDR.

this one..........

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nope. from Hong Kong. Do you have a link of the FFVII image though because I've only given permission for one person and they used it in a Ghost in a Shell fanart.

sorry dude i dont know waht you are talking about. it just reminds me of some square apocalyptic shinra steez

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honestly, i would always choose a prime lens for portraits over a zoom lens. prime lenses are almost always sharper than zooms and most are faster too - having the ability to shoot at a wider aperture will give you that nice depth of field that you'll probably want when shooting portraits (to blur out a distracting background).

I'm thinking of shooting some portraits (headshots) for a friend here at school. I'm gonna use my 55-200 in natural light and do it up on PS. Is this not gonna come out well? I only have a standard 35 and my 55-200, and the 55-200 is a much crisper/clear lens.[/img]
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Guest Methimphibian

Anyone here have any albums of night time photography, specifically ones with ghost/spirits(long exposures resulting in transparency of people), or any ideas for ghosts for a photoshoot. it's for an assignment

thanks

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Anyone here have any albums of night time photography, specifically ones with ghost/spirits(long exposures resulting in transparency of people), or any ideas for ghosts for a photoshoot. it's for an assignment

thanks

www.sheerentertainment.com

Not the most interesting, but there are some examples of what you're talking about.

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honestly, i would always choose a prime lens for portraits over a zoom lens. prime lenses are almost always sharper than zooms and most are faster too - having the ability to shoot at a wider aperture will give you that nice depth of field that you'll probably want when shooting portraits (to blur out a distracting background).

Exactly as he states and not to mention picking up a cheap 50 mm f1.8 from either Canon or Nikon (~$100 USD) is quite cheap and should get the job done.

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