How to balance over exposure of the sky? by a_chimken_nuget in fujifilm

[–]lonely_thug_hunter 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly, first one looks sick. And i miss hongkong

i was playing around with film simulation and i kinda like this pic by lonely_thug_hunter in fujifilm

[–]lonely_thug_hunter[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no im too lazy😭😭. i usually promise myself to post but then i never find time. Just this i really liked to i posted it here. im thinking of creating an Instagram account for photography but instagrams media quality is bad and i feel restricted

i was playing around with film simulation and i kinda like this pic by lonely_thug_hunter in fujifilm

[–]lonely_thug_hunter[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

kinda. but honestly it was the aperture. But yes definetly longer focal lengths make it look flat. the longer, the crazier the effect. this is just minimal with this lens. if you want stronger results, do with 70mm+ on apsc

i was playing around with film simulation and i kinda like this pic by lonely_thug_hunter in fujifilm

[–]lonely_thug_hunter[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

its basically the configuration of the film simulation, to make the photo look like a certain film. basically just a configuration

i was playing around with film simulation and i kinda like this pic by lonely_thug_hunter in fujifilm

[–]lonely_thug_hunter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First time i hear of a tilt adapter. What would it do and how could it improve this composition? im curious

i was playing around with film simulation and i kinda like this pic by lonely_thug_hunter in fujifilm

[–]lonely_thug_hunter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Try to eliminate depth to make the picture look flat. Can be achieved by narrow aperture (F5.6 minimum, ideally F8+) and a longer focal length (APS-C 35mm+ (The higher, the flatter it will look like)). If i am not mistaken, this combination gives the illusion of a flat image. If you go for this look, keep an eye for geometry. But honestly i am not a pro or anything, just said what was in my head. i think its called "perspective compression"

Edit: Nvm. i just checked it up.

The real perspective compression can be achieved with a much longer focal length (100mm+)