kickaha: (Default)
kickaha ([personal profile] kickaha) wrote2007-09-12 11:42 pm

Iiiiiii'm saaaaailing awaaaaaaaaaaaay....

Tonight's birthday surprise from the ever-stupendous [livejournal.com profile] ginkgo was a sunset sailing cruise on the Hudson, from Pier 59 on Manhattan, down to the Statue of Liberty and back. 2 hours, and an open bar. Woot! Attempts were made at pictures, but... dusk + city lights + rocking boat = no chance in hell of anything but blur. I'll see what can be scavenged. Dinner was a picnic picked up at the Chelsea Market on the way, and afterwards there was a snack (okay, second dinner) at Pop, which served up two mini burgers, damned good onion rings, and a strawberry shake for the low, LOW price of $15+. Per person. Luckily, we split it, so it was really only $15+ for both of us. :)

And now, I am teh ded.

[identity profile] kickaha.livejournal.com 2007-09-13 03:32 pm (UTC)(link)
blah blah Ginger blah blah blah

I'm going to have to grab the camera manual, and see if I can cross-reference it with the above. :D

[identity profile] georgmi.livejournal.com 2007-09-13 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
What camera do you have?

[identity profile] kickaha.livejournal.com 2007-09-13 03:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Canon PowerShot A620

ie, Push Here, Dummy.

It does have a fairly complete manual mode, I just haven't ever, like, played with it. The auto modes do a pretty fair job 99% of the time. (I guess I should learn the manual approach for those last 1%...)

[identity profile] georgmi.livejournal.com 2007-09-13 04:13 pm (UTC)(link)
You'll be looking for something like "exposure compensation" or "EV". The histogram is an awesome tool; discussion thereof should be in the image review section of the manual.

If you're really lucky, the camera will have a live histogram mode, where it shows the histogram while you're composing the image. M.'s little P&S does that, and when we remember to turn it on, it's an extremely helpful tool.

You may also be able to adjust the aperture wider to shorten the shutter speed, but my guess is that the auto mode is already opening as wide as it can.

(The histogram, by the way, shows you the distribution of pixels in the image over the range of exposure values from detail-less black to blown-out white. Too many pixels pushed up to one or the other end of the histogram means big blocks of blank space in the image. Though "too many" depends on the image, the circumstances, and the tastes of the photographer and/or viewer.)

[identity profile] kickaha.livejournal.com 2007-09-13 04:55 pm (UTC)(link)
I do recall seeing a live histogram at one point while I was mucking with it soon after we got it. I'll have to recover how to do that.