Dodał: FoTHR21W,
2015-03-11 Hi Jim,What made you knock on the door
in the first place?I don't know if I
could do a job like that... though if
it was stilckry a mechanical operation
that pulled his hands out I might feel
better... a computer operation, not so
sure... one software clitch could make
for a bad day.That factory must have
been pretty cool to see, thanks
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Dodał: FBzEFcbY5fY,
2015-03-09 I see you finally had to do this Capcha
thing a href="http://brrfmjqsiq.com"
baseuce /a of robo spam. Sad. Oh well.
I once had an opportunity to clean large
industrial machines from the inside out.
It was a fascinating and fruitful
experience. Plus it was exhausting since
I was working in 90 degree heat with a
jumpsuit on. Anyways maybe for another
one of your excursions, maybe explore a
large machine from the inside? Not in
use of course.
Dodał: STP5aeQs,
2015-03-08 Here is a check list in roughly order of
iacortmnpe.1) If you have a protection'
filter on your lens take it off and
throw it away. Any extra glass in front
of your lens is never a good idea for
picture quality, a thin piece of glass
offers no real mechanical protection
(just the opposite in fact) a good lens
hood offers more. There may be some
argument for them in dry blown sand or
dusty situations, but I don't own any.2)
Buy good quality lenses, all lenses have
compromises in their designs wide range
zooms are the most compromised of all
and will never yield prize winning
results, use quality small range zooms
(say a 3 : 1 zoom ratio) or preferably
prime lenses. Unfortunately there is a
hefty price tag on this one, but lens
quality is the single most important
component of image quality. Make of
camera is the least important.3) Shoot
to the histogram. Set your camera so it
shows the histogram on the screen after
each shot, your histogram should be as
close to the right (where there is a
greater level of tones available) but
never quite touching the right hand
edge. Its better to go more to the left
than to go into the right, once pixels
have reached the right hand side they
are burnt out and have no detail.This
can be like skating on thin ice a tiny
step too far and the whole picture falls
apart, which is why you might hear
shoot to the left' which is a safer
option, but will never yield the full
dynamic range. I/3rd of stop can make
all the difference here particularly
with wide dynamic range shots. There are
subjects that have a lot of white in
them such as the ubiquitous white cat
in snow' so a few pixels may end up on
the extreme right and edge of the
histogram, but don't let them stack up
even snow has detail. Even though this
might yield a seemingly dark image you
have recorded the most detail which can
be brought out in post processing.An
important point here is even if you
shoot RAW any blown out detail is lost
and cannot be recovered even in a RAW
converter the data is just not in the
file.4) Dump the auto settings they
rarely yield optimum results, aperture
priority (Av) is favourite (as you can
control depth of field). Full manual is
best of all when you get to know how
your camera will react to the scene in
front of it. Full manual is the only way
to get flash and ambient light to mix
together perfectly so all the shadows
have detail, but the overall effect is
that the picture was shot without
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Dodał: EISyP4bsBkN6,
2015-03-06 Huehuehue. Jestem geniuszem. Albo i nie.
ZaleĹźy pod jakim kÄ tem na mnie a
href="http://zlmmkowfb.com" syosrzpjz
/a xDD ChciaĹabym ĹźebyĹ oceniĹa
ksiÄ ĹźkÄ '50 twarzy Greya', i moĹźe
byÄ to dluga recenzja. Plik juĹź
wysĹaĹam na fejsie, wiÄc miĹego
czytania
Dodał: CboSeeIlBN6,
2015-03-06 What a joy to find such clear thgiiknn.
Thanks for posting!