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well not exactly a tripod but just a stable surface to put your hands on or to put the phone on so that it does not shake, like a rail/table/chair etc. and for situations without any stable surface to lean on, I use ISO 200 or maybe even ISO 400 nightmode to avoid blur at the cost of some film grain on the photo.
[ This Message was edited by: reeflotz on 2012-11-29 13:43 ]
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Posted: 2012-11-29 14:42:00
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On 2012-11-29 14:35:26, etaab wrote:
But in everyday use or when doing the whole tourist thing, how many of us actually use a tripod ? and how many use a tripod with a cameraphone ?
well I do, it really do help a lot in capturing many usable photos.
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Posted: 2012-11-29 16:33:50
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Some I did today. it shows the sky as brighter in these images than it actually was
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Birmingham Frankfurt Christmas markets. I too find lowering EV a touch does help with grain but also can make image too dark. With these images on the Xperia P night scene mode it shakes alot so had to hold my breath in the cold weather & hold steady on a wall or table
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Posted: 2012-11-29 20:20:48
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Those dont look dark at all..
Heh i like the woman in picture 6, all that Christmas cultural food around and where has she been ? Greggs !!
I'll have a play around and see what i can come up with this weekend. Nice pictures though.
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Posted: 2012-11-29 23:56:05
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I know crazy. I never noticed that at first. It's like when Brits go abroad & they eat egg & chips rather experience the food of the country your visiting

No these won't look dark as I never did turn down the EV
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Posted: 2012-11-30 00:14:23
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Well tomorrow im going to (another) Christmas market and it will be dark so i'll be trying to get some shots there using the tips provided.
Cant say i hold much hope though lol.
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Posted: 2012-12-01 21:13:34
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Taken in my livingroom, I always shoot in Auto-mode
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Posted: 2012-12-01 23:42:06
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Looks grainy. As do mine indoors. In that environment i would just use the flash.
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Posted: 2012-12-02 10:59:50
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concerning night time photos, i have my own theory which is: the longer maximum exposure time phone has, better it is for nighttime shooting. For instance my LG kc910 renoir has only 1/4 sec max exposure time and i know that after sunset i cant picture anything worthwile. kc910 actually can go up to 1600 ISO but with so "big" sensor, theres more noise than picture itself

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Posted: 2012-12-02 11:20:27
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etaab, of course it's grainy, it's taken with a phone. Most cameras would produce a grainy picture under such low light. Using a flash would only lit up the room and make it look unnatural
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Posted: 2012-12-02 14:59:08
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