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    Thursday, December 31, 2020

    Real Estate Photography: If you guys are curious about the behind the scenes of architectural/interior photography, check out @shiftercom on Instagram. I've been pivoting as well from real estate photography and do some of the interviews

    Real Estate Photography: If you guys are curious about the behind the scenes of architectural/interior photography, check out @shiftercom on Instagram. I've been pivoting as well from real estate photography and do some of the interviews


    If you guys are curious about the behind the scenes of architectural/interior photography, check out @shiftercom on Instagram. I've been pivoting as well from real estate photography and do some of the interviews

    Posted: 31 Dec 2020 06:40 PM PST

    https://www.instagram.com/shiftercom/ it's cool to see everyone set ups with the before shooting on the scene and final results. Art (who started it) and I cover gear as well and interview some of the best photographers. Thanks!

    submitted by /u/electrictalk
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    Critique my first shoot.

    Posted: 31 Dec 2020 10:33 AM PST

    Hey everyone, please let me know what I need to work on. I bought a Sony A7iii and 16-35mm Zeiss lens for Black Friday and have been watching YouTube tutorials for real estate photography.

    This was a for sale by owner I saw with blurry phone photos so I asked to shoot the place for practice.

    It was showering yesterday when I did my shoot so I did not know what to do with the lights. That is one thing that stands out to me. Is it better if I shoot with lights off then up the exposure in light room? Also the bulbs were incandescent in most of the rooms. What do I with that?

    https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/18l1yUg-JD5ZmDxuQ18Vxv9oZF8ucTaSh

    submitted by /u/TwiceCaptain
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    I am looking for some advice on real estate photography. Preferably about choosing lenses

    Posted: 31 Dec 2020 01:10 PM PST

    Getting into it pretty early along with most being 2-3 bed rooms or more. Open areas down stairs are debatable but upstairs areas are nice but tighter . Meaning bed rooms are decent size but not huge besides the master being normal size for along with restrooms. Currently using a Canon Rebel T6s with a EF 50mm 1.4 and a EF-S 18-135mm. Third lens out of the question since it's more for interviews or two people conversations for a tighter frame. I'm looking for a wider angle lens than the 18-135 to grab more of a wider view of the rooms instead of it being a tighter look. Looking for more information on lens that are not totally expensive but still do able on the wider end of deal. Any information is helpful thanks.

    submitted by /u/BoldRocketeer
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    My recent real estate video! Trying to perfect this kind of look. Not super into fast gimbal movements. I got a fluid head recently so I will try to incorporate them in my upcoming videos. Feedback please, thanks! :)

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 09:43 PM PST

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