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What Is The Best Setting For A Family Portrait

Fujifilm FinePix S700 Best setting for outdoor family portraits?

I am VERY new to photography and just purchased a Fuji S700. I am to take family portraits outside by a lake and thought about going around sunset because its so beatiful that time of day. My question is what setting would be good for that?? Again, I am NEW so, please bear with me :) I do have a tripod by the way if that helps. There are so many settings on this thing and I have read throug hthe manual but, still am a bit confused. I am going to look into taking photography classes but, in the meantime, could someone offer me some advice on this outdoor "photoshoot" :) THANKS!

What camera is best for family portraits and sports?

Family portraits means restless kids. So you will need high speeds and moderate apertures, hence high ISO capability.Sports mean restless people in not-so-well-lit places. Plus, you may want high frame rates.In short, seek a camera with high ISO capability and high frame rates. Do not just look a specs, as having a 100 000 ISO setting available does not mean that the pics will be usable. Test sites will tell you about the degradation of image quality when pushing the ISO.In both cases, you may also benefit from fast and accurate autofocus. This is usually the result of a proper camera / lens combination, not camera alone. Again, test sites may provide useful information, as there is no general answer.Most entry-level DSLRs will fill the bill. Get the camera you can afford and practice. Practicing will increase your keeper rate more effectively than spending dollars.

What is the best setting to take portrait shots in a Nikon D3400?

For professional look photos, a big aperture and excellent light are key mechanism.Construction of the lenses is also seen. Say for 50mm you will have different choices based on aperture and budget. Like 1.8 manual or auto, 1.4, 1.2 etc.For each one the setting will be changed, depends upon these parameters.However, basic will be aperture the bigger, maintaining a good distance from the person and between the person to background.Setting iso as low as 100. Could be up to 200 or 400 on the light settingIf using flash, choose the kind of flash. If it's ttl using 1 or 2 flashes, can be set from either side or left or right and one at front.Hope this helps.

What setting should I use for shooting portraits with a 55-200mm F/4-5.6 kit lens?

“What setting should I use for shooting portraits with a 55-200mm F/4-5.6 kit lens?”As with many things in life, it depends of the situation.For instance on a photoshoot on location with poor lighting and a busy background you may want to get that shallow depth of fields and go for the wide open aperture. On that lens that’ll be F/4.Since F/4 isn’t very “open” (think F/1.2 or F/1.4 for wide open aperture), you may use the zoom to isolate your subject from the background and lower the shutter speed to keep moving parts in the background even more blurring.A good rule of thumb is to go as slow as you can while keeping the subject eyes in focus and sharp.Compensate ISO to have the effect you are looking for with whatever available light.Now if you shoot in more controlled condition, you may have speedlight(s) / reflectors / diffusers / strobes or even continuous light to play with.In that situation, I would suggest to go with the sharpest your lens can be. Usually the “sweet spot” is around F/8 (you can research that online for each lens), use the zoom to “compress” the subject to your taste.ISO should be as low as you can and adapt the shutter speed to the effect you want on the background : the slower, the more natural light you let in.For instance this picture was shot at F/11, 85mm ISO 100 1/160s. Subject about 1.5m away from background.Plan the picture you want to make, see how you can achieve the vision you have in your mind.My 3 yenSee more at Fabien Sena Photography

What is the best lens to shoot a group family portrait using the Nikon D3300,which is a crop frame?

This depends almost entirely on size of the family and location of the shot. For a small family in a studio setting or a home setting with plenty of working distance, a normal perspective lens would work well. For the D3300 that would be roughly a 35mm lens.For example, here’s a link to some poses for a family of six … Photography Poses for 6 People. You’ll see that a good family pose will place each face in approximately the same plane of focus and with good lighting.Personally, I would stay away from wider angle lenses. If you don’t have enough working room then try changing location or going outdoors. The additional working room provides a more relaxed atmosphere, better perspectives of the individual faces, and avoids a wide angle distortion for the faces near the edge of the frame.

What's the best setting for portraits on DSLR(Canon EOS t2i rebel)?

There's no "best setting" per se but many good portraits are achieved using aperture priority mode ("Av") and setting it to the lowest value your lens supports (e.g. 2.8, 3.5 or 5.6). This ensures the depth of focus is shallow which helps you isolate the person you're photographing from the background. Note that if you have a prime lens that can go as low as f/1.4 or f/1.8, that may be too shallow unless you're standing far back.If you have a zoom lens, zooming in all the way can also help remove distractions in the background. Be sure to position the person such that distractions in the background are minimized (this is very important). Also, if the person has dark hair, don't frame their head against something dark as they'll blend into it. You want to person to stand out.Your camera should be on "Auto" for ISO (e.g. light sensitivity) and your shutter speed will probably fluctuate between 1/60th second and faster automatically. If you keep getting camera shake in the shot, increase your ISO above the automatic value being selected by your camera (click INFO repeatedly while viewing the photo to see what ISO it used last and then double it).For example: If you set your camera to 5.6 (typical aperture for a t2i kit lens fully zoomed in), then you shutter may be 1/60th at an ISO of 400. If you get camera shake style blur, then change the ISO from Auto to ISO 800. Now the shutter will be at 1/125th which is better for freezing some motion by you or the subject.Finally, make sure the image is bright. It's easy to underexpose photos that have large light-coloured backgrounds. If this is the case, use exposure compensation via the Quick Menu. Move the dash that's below a "0" up a few notches. Going to "+1" is doubling the amount of light you let in which may be too much so it lets you go in 1/3 increments. This part is trial and error.Final tip for composition: Shoot what you feel looks good and then get closer and shoot again... and repeat. You will probably find the closer ones are better. Go so far as to cut off the person's forehead in your closest composition. Just don't go too close to their chin.Lastly, have fun!

Which is the best custom settings for portrait Photoshoot in Nikon 5200d with 70-300mm lens?

Thanks for the A2A.f around 5.6 to get a shallow depth of field  and crisp shot ISO as low as possiblespot metering  at the telephoto length , you can't get close to the person , so adjust focal length accordingly  .experiment and see as the settings also Depend on the light

Can I take a good family portrait with only 1 octabox and 600w flash? And what's the best camera set up?

Sure you can, but you might face some limitations depending on the size of the family, the size of your Octa, and the type of portrait you’re trying to achieve.There’s no best setup, but you have some options.Boom the light over, and shoot from right under or behind the light, straight on. Not too flattering but your light will be flat and even. You can probably do better.Light from camera left, with the light sweeping gently across their faces. Add a reflector or white bounce from the other side to help fill in some shadows.Bounce your light off a wall to create a larger light source. Fill in shadows where desired using your reflector.Use window light as your main, and your Octa as a fill light. Dial your strobe to a low setting so it doesn’t overpower the light coming through the window.Shoot in a room with white walls and use them for fill. Use your Octa up a little higher than your subject’s heads, angled down, and position your light, camera left.If you’re shooting a mix of people with different skin tones, standing in a row, and want to angle your light from one side, try positioning the people with darker tones nearer to the light.A one light setup is fine for smaller families, but it really depends on what type of portrait you’re trying to achieve. Moody and dramatic, light and airy, natural, etc.I myself shoot with only one strobe pretty frequently, even though I own more.//5 Easy Studio Setups With One LightThe Wonderful World of Single Light Set-Ups - DIY Photography10 Ways to Shoot Stunning Portraits With Only One LightSimple, One-light SetupCan I take a good family portrait with only 1 octabox and 600w flash? And what's the best camera set up?.

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