Wedding Photography Burnout
Wedding Photography and the burnout factor… if you take a look at our front page, on the wedding photographer melbourne website, you’ll see a photography depicting an example of what we mean. If you have arrived at this blog after March 2012, and the photo is no longer on the front page of the website, just enter “whitechapel” without quotes, into the search bar at the top of the front page.
Once you find the relevant photo, you’ll see the perfect pictorial example of burnout brought on by wedding photography.
On a completely different note, we notice that there has been a lot of conjecture about the Nikon D800 of late, and as you are probably well and truly aware by now, the suffix “e” indicates that the camera does not have an anti-aliasing filter in front of the sensor.
This has brought all the armchair experts and opinion-givers to the fore- most of whom have no idea about shooting great images let alone experise on anti-aliasing filters.
Regular folk will know that in the days when full-chip cameras were prohibitively expensive, I used one- cost is never an issue when you are buying something good. My weapon of choice was the Kodak 14n, which had no anti-aliasing filter. Given the level of familiarity of the equipment, I am preparing a short article on the incidence of moire without an AA filter present.
This article will soon appear on the website… so stay tuned!
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