Nikon D80 Usage
By afoosnest
@afoosnest (11)
Pakistan
January 20, 2007 3:57pm CST
I have just started to use Nikon D80 DSLR... Dont know much about other lenses on it .. but am using Dx 18-200mm VR lense with it... This Kido gives brilliant result when doing outdoor daylight shoots... but need help and advise on improving onto lenses and my photography techniques( which are Raw).Is there some one around who can guide me on how to measure perfect export..detect perfect White Balance.. How to measure perfect landscape composition... how to manipulate flash... etc... well I m always here for learning
4 responses
@afoosnest (11)
• Pakistan
23 Jan 07
Will do ..sure... am busy now a days to my neck... Its superb... yes i agree but the type of job i m in chains me not to see the light of the day... will do certianly post pics here... will have to organise myself first...
@vintage_blowout (277)
• Philippines
24 Jan 07
Me too! I'm aiming for this camera. It's in my new yr's goals :)
@jayperiod (870)
• United States
21 Jan 07
Good camera. I'm jealous!
What digital editing software are you using? Photoshop CS2 has some great tools for working with RAW files. It's extremely pricey, though.
I've learned the key to getting good adjustments on your photos is to have a good monitor. There are techniques out there for calibrating your monitor, I'd do an internet search for how to adjust yours. Basically, you need to set the monitor to daylight balance and good color. Those should be easy adjustments to locate and fix.
As for white balance, if you're shooting RAW, the camera isn't presetting anything, so you will do that in your software. Each software is different, so I'd try the tutorials on it or search for good tutorials in the internet. I've found about 5 or 6 for Photoshop that I go back to so I can learn more all the time. Learn a little at a time, practice the heck out of it, then move on to the next.
Some of the others may be personal preferences. Flash, cropping, etc., all depend on the look you are looking for. Practice, practice, practice are the best thing. The good thing about digital photography is that it's not expensive, just time consuming.
Keep posting and you'll find people here who have good knowledge and you'll pick up on some things quick and before you know it, you'll be producing the photos you always wanted to.
@afoosnest (11)
• Pakistan
23 Jan 07
Thanx for the response.. Well yes I do shoot in both JPEG/RAW as D80 allows it to shoot simultaneously both versions for a shot. I prefer to work on RAW though as it saves more color and detail pixels. I was using my laptop which i tried to caliberate to adobe caliberation standards but with little or no success, As laptop screen of my acer TravelMate 3002WTMi is still shows no reckoning for such caliberation. Well I was using adobe Photoshop CS2 first for creating something out of my pics but then realized that it was Nikon Capture NX which has more flexible and comprehensive options for working on RAW. Now using it only.But on the way used other Raw software like Optipix and photomatix pro. Well Am still looking for the Killer shot out of my Camera. ALthough I have the best lense available with it DX18mm-200mm VR. Which they say is the king of lenses now a days but still crispy daylight shoots are not coming out of my camera. Thats i know is the problem with my technique i suppose to capture the right exposure. Well thanx anyway for giving a precious advise.
@dh0n_5 (16)
• Philippines
25 Jan 07
I also have the same setup. I suggest you buy SB600 or SB800 flash and try to experiment different lightning setup, both flash can be used remotely better if you have both flash. For Landscaping i suggest you used grid line in your viewfinder so you have better composition and perfect horizontal lines in your images. Hope this help, good luck.
@Davidarich (985)
• Australia
21 Jan 09
I know that this is a very old discussion, but I pricked up my ears when I saw your comment the the VR lens you are using is the "king of lenses".
NO zoom lens is going to give you the crispness of resolution of a prime lens; and the longer the lens zoom range, generally the more loss in sharpness compared with a prime, especially ate the long end.
I do not know how good your technique is, but this is a "consumer" lens, not professional glass, so if you have not yet got that standout quality you were seeking, maybe it is time to reconsider the lens.