General > Photography Section
Photographing Buildings.....
MattPoss:
What kind of DSLR Camera and Lens set up would be best for taking photos of buildings?!
Basically, we are builders and were currently getting a new website made which requires some nice fancy pictures of jobs we've done and current jobs as they progress. I'd been wanting to get a decent DSLR camera to learn with for a while so now seems like a good time to get one. I've looked around a little bit and think I fancy either a Nikon or Canon although I'm open to any suggestions. Budget probably around the £500 mark
Also, I'll be using it when I'm away watching motorbike racing so in time I could do with a lens for that as well?!
Cheers,
Matt
damoegan:
For shooting building I'd want a 12-24mm (or thereabouts) and for motorsport I'd want something like a 200-400mm..
RedRobin:
.
It's been a long time and I've forgotten what the lens is correctly called but basically it shifts and consequently 'corrects' perspective. It was a 35mm system Nikor lens. But I think you can now do some of this in Adobe Photoshop CS. It's always a problem with architectural photography when you can't position yourself far enough away. It's another reason why we used plate cameras but that all that gets mighty expensive and cumbersome.
damoegan:
Think your talking about Tilt Shift, Robin!
A proper Tilt Shoft lans in VERY expensive (a good few grand :stupid:)..
Search Tilt Shift in Google and there are websites that lets you turn a normal photo into a Tilt Shift effect for free..
RedRobin:
--- Quote from: damoegan on June 18, 2011, 11:06:37 pm ---
Think your talking about Tilt Shift, Robin!
A proper Tilt Shoft lans in VERY expensive (a good few grand :stupid:)..
Search Tilt Shift in Google and there are websites that lets you turn a normal photo into a Tilt Shift effect for free..
--- End quote ---
....Yep, that's the one :happy2: - I'm talking back in the days before the hyperwebbyinterthingynet existed. We used to either hire what we needed for a job (all paid for by the client) or I would commission a specialist photographer who already had the gear.
I used to give a lot of work to this guy and he's a very good friend (I haven't seen him for a while!): http://www.gsol.co.uk/library/architecture/icons.html
EDIT: I've just been looking at his site and realise that I Art Directed a few of those pics!
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
Go to full version