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A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

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betty
My boys

Member since 5/05

4380 total posts

Name:
Beth

A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

I know how all of us mommies like to take lots and lots and lots of pictures so I figured I would ask here.

We just got a new camera...it's a Canon Powershot SD630 - 6.0 mega pixels (reading all of this from the cameraChat Icon ). I am having SUCH a problem with red eye with Logan. Even with our last digital camera. Both cameras have the red eye removal button but he still has red eye in almost EVERY picture!!! Am I doing something wrong..... Is there anything I can do?

Posted 11/14/06 3:00 PM
 
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JerseyMamaOf3
Boo!

Member since 6/05

15144 total posts

Name:

Re: A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

I have the Canon SD550 (which is the older model of yours I believe) and I have the same problem. The only thing that I do notice is that if I take the pictures in natural light, like by a window or outside he doesnt get the red eye. I try that and see what happens. I dont have any tips for taking indoor

Posted 11/14/06 3:13 PM
 

betty
My boys

Member since 5/05

4380 total posts

Name:
Beth

Re: A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

I agree, natural light it usually isn't so bad. It's usually inside or when a flash is actually needed......it drives me nuts!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Chat Icon

Posted 11/14/06 3:18 PM
 

twobabies
Praying

Member since 7/05

9662 total posts

Name:
Mrs. Honeybee

Re: A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

ok now thats weird, LOL. i just sent an fm to barbara the other day cause my lil guy, logan, as well. is always getting red eye also. she told me when taking a pic inside. to put on all the lights and open all the blinds and take the pic with no flash. that should help a lil bit.Chat Icon

Posted 11/14/06 3:23 PM
 

betty
My boys

Member since 5/05

4380 total posts

Name:
Beth

Re: A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

Posted by twobabies

ok now thats weird, LOL. i just sent an fm to barbara the other day cause my lil guy, logan, as well. is always getting red eye also. she told me when taking a pic inside. to put on all the lights and open all the blinds and take the pic with no flash. that should help a lil bit.Chat Icon



Chat Icon Chat Icon Chat Icon Thanks, I will try it!

Posted 11/14/06 3:26 PM
 

nrthshgrl
It goes fast. Pay attention.

Member since 7/05

57538 total posts

Name:

Re: A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

Source


This article was excerpted from:
Shooting & Sharing Digital Photos for Dummies

Red-eye occurs when light from the built-in flash of a camera bounces off the subject's retinas and reflects back to the camera lens. Along the way, the light takes on the tint of the blood vessels in the eye, which causes the eyes to appear to be glowing red in the picture. In animal pictures, eyes often have a white, yellow, or green glint.

Red-eye can result from any camera with a built-in flash, not just a digital camera. Why just a built-in flash? Because a built-in flash is positioned very close to the camera lens. When people look into the lens, they're also looking directly at the flash, which means that their retinas pick up and reflect almost all of the light from the flash. When you use an external flash head, you can position the flash farther from the lens and also angle the flash so that it's not aimed directly at the eyes.

Most digital cameras don't have connections for attaching an external flash head, unfortunately. Using a slave flash - a flash unit that is designed to work in tandem with a built-in flash - isn't always a solution, either, because your camera's built-in flash needs to fire to trigger the slave flash. If you stand at a distance from your subject, the built-in flash may be far enough away to prevent red-eye, but if you want to get a close-up, you're right back in red-eye zone. So what's the casual photographer to do?

A couple of tactics help reduce - but may not entirely eliminate - red-eye:

Indoors, turn on as many lights as possible. In response to the additional light, your subject's eyes will constrict a little, so less flash light will be reflected back to the lens. (This is why you can usually use flash in the daytime without creating red-eye.) Most cameras also adjust flash output based on the ambient room lighting, so the brighter the setting, the weaker the flash needs to be.

If you're shooting indoors during daylight, position your subjects next to a window. The daylight coming through the window will have the same effect as turning on additional room lights.

Switch the flash to red-eye reduction mode. In red-eye reduction mode, the camera fires a brief, preflash light in advance of the main flash. The idea is the same as turning on lots of room lights - the eyes constrict in response to the preflash so that when the main flash fires, less light is reflected from the retinas. Keep in mind, though, that it's called red-eye reduction and not red-eye prevention mode for a reason: That little preflash can do only so much, so you may still wind up with some red-eye areas.

Be sure to warn your subjects to expect two bursts of light. Otherwise, they'll think that the preflash is the real flash and assume that they can quit smiling and get back to whatever they were doing before you pestered them for a picture. Some cameras actually emit three lights for each shot. The third beam, which the camera sends out when you depress the shutter button halfway, helps the camera's autofocusing mechanism pinpoint the subject-to-camera distance.

Consider posing your subjects so that they're not looking directly into the camera lens. A profile shot can be every bit as captivating as a regular, face-forward image, as illustrated by Figure 1. You also can ask your subjects to look off to one side or slightly up or down. Because the flash light won't be heading straight for the eyes, red-eye reflections will be minimized.

Despite your best efforts though, some pictures will still be marred by the red-eye effect. The good news is that you can fix the problem easily in your photo editor.

Posted 11/14/06 3:36 PM
 

betty
My boys

Member since 5/05

4380 total posts

Name:
Beth

Re: A camera question I should ask on NFR but.....

Thank you!Chat Icon

Posted 11/14/06 4:40 PM
 
 

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