DSLR Owners Unite! (56k? Are you kidding me?)
I can't really detect any lomo-ness besides the vignette and contrast. Although the original lomo look was from the type of camera and the way the film was processed, in today's photography it seems that it's used to convey a nostalgic mood. Your subject plays a big part in that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lomography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lomography
I should try that. I was switching settings like mad because of how weird the sun was with the snow. Thought I found the happy medium, but I see now that they are all way to bright and you can't see the contrast in objects, mainly the snow.
Last edited by Big_Bird; Feb 7, 2010 at 01:12 AM.

And being at the fair adds to the nostalgic mood of it.
Snow is nothing but a big reflector. It's hard to get detail in it for sure.
no I didn't.... I was reading another tutorial and it covered another 4-5 steps I didn't do after set the curves...
http://digital-photography-school.co...mo-photography
http://digital-photography-school.co...mo-photography
a rule of thumb i've developed is shoot for what looks like slight underexposed pictures on your LCD. when you get them on the computer they look right. if the picture looks perfect on the LCD after i take it, it's almost always overexposed when i get it on the computer screen.
a rule of thumb i've developed is shoot for what looks like slight underexposed pictures on your LCD. when you get them on the computer they look right. if the picture looks perfect on the LCD after i take it, it's almost always overexposed when i get it on the computer screen.
Side note: I left my tripod 4 hours away in NJ. How hard is it to ship a tripod? I don't have a box for it. I'm at school and my dumba$$ left the tripod home when I came back.












