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Old Posted Apr 2, 2009, 9:01 PM
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initiald initiald is offline
Oak City
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Raleigh
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brickell View Post
That was the advice I was given as well. I don't disagree with it. But I found myself trying to force a lot of pictures when there wasn't enough light and becoming disappointed with the whole thing. I had to teach myself that it's better to shoot with higher ISO than to end up with 40 blurry pictures.
I've been told tripods have been made obsolete by today's high ISOs. Crank it up to 3200, and open your aperture to the max f/1.8 or f/1.4 or whatever and go with it.

I still use tripods for long shutter shots when I want some motion blur or a good skyline shot.
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