There is no way to "erase" pictures from film. Film is light sensitive...when it is exposed to light, it causes a chemical reaction on the film and it captures an image. The image is almost literally "burned" onto the film. There is no delete, there is no erase. It's there forever.
If you...
There is no way to "erase" pictures from film. Film is light sensitive...when it is exposed to light, it causes a chemical reaction on the film and it captures an image. The image is almost literally "burned" onto the film. There is no delete, there is no erase. It's there forever.
If you...
Actually, correctly exposed film captures more like 100 megapixels of information, and that's only a rough equivalent since you're comparing apples and oranges ;)
One of the reasons is because light causes chemical changes to film on the molecular level. The film actually captures the image...
I want to take a photography class, but my major reluctance is that I don't want to be sitting at a computer "photoshopping" digital images. I'm already around computers all the time as it is, and I don't want another computer science class disguised as a photography class.
If I were to take a...
It's called "Street Photography" and it means taking, natural, candid pictures of people on public streets.
It's a completely legal and accepted genre of photography. If you are in a public place, like a public street, park, etc, then legally someone CAN take your picture without your...
I see this all the time. Why do people say that it is illegal to download images from a website...even though you ALREADY have?
Whenever you go to a website, your computer has to download the images in order to even display the website to begin with. Every time you go to a website, the image...
It has absolutely nothing to do with whether the camera is a DSLR. In fact, it really has nothing to do with the camera. You do that with an image editing program. You have to take the picture in color first.
It's called "selective color" and it's actually a very lame fad and a cliche. In...
It has absolutely nothing to do with whether the camera is a DSLR. In fact, it really has nothing to do with the camera. You do that with an image editing program. You have to take the picture in color first.
It's called "selective color" and it's actually a very lame fad and a cliche. In...
Sorry...but you are NOT going to find anything that fits what you want for the money you want to spend. No way. For $125, you could get a cheap digital point and shoot camera, which is fine for snapshots. But not real photography. It sounds like you want to take a lot of action shots, and...