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    Thursday, January 14, 2021

    Real Estate Photography: Lens for Sony A7iii.

    Real Estate Photography: Lens for Sony A7iii.


    Lens for Sony A7iii.

    Posted: 14 Jan 2021 05:25 PM PST

    Sorry, posting another poll. I'm now deciding between these two lens.

    View Poll

    submitted by /u/constantly-growing
    [link] [comments]

    Would it be worth it switching from HDR to Flash in my situation?

    Posted: 14 Jan 2021 10:08 AM PST

    I have the choice between getting a new lens for $600 or a godox ad200 for $300.

    Im currently shooting with an EOS RP and the Tokina 11-16mm. The only issue is that the RP is a full frame camera and the Tokina is an apsc lens. As a result all the images i've shot to date have been 10MP even though the RP is a 26MP camera.

    With enough natural light I'm able to get pretty good images from my current setup. With house lighting or dark interiors the images start look worse.

    I'm not really sure if the loss in quality is due to my lens choice or just the limitations of HDR (I use Photomatix).

    What would result in me getting the biggest increase in quality? Are the 10MP photos preventing me from getting as much quality out of the HDR photos as I could be? Will there be a noticeable increase in photo quality if I got a full frame wide angle lens and started using the whole sensor or should I just keep my current lens setup and invest in a flash instead of HDR?

    submitted by /u/SlightlyBelowGreat
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    How and where should I start?

    Posted: 14 Jan 2021 06:37 AM PST

    Hello,

    I have been practicing photography for a little bit over two years now. I have pretty much been concentrated on astrophotography as of recently, however I have also done plenty of landscape photography as well. I have definitely upped my editing skills since starting and that has been one of the biggest factors improving my photography. Astrophotography is no easy task and it has really been challenging me with my editing skills, it's very easy to push something too far.

    Anyway, I would love to get started into real estate photography. I have most of the gear needed. I have an A6000, I know not as fancy as some here but I love the little camera so much and I know how to use it so well. My widest lens I have I believe is too wide at 12mm, but with the crop sensor the fov is smaller. My main lens I would use is the Tamron 17 - 35mm and then a long lens with the canon 70 - 200mm. I do not imagine there would be much use for that. I have a few filters and I would imagine that a lot of CPL is used, which I have as well. I have a very strong and sturdy tripod with rubber feet. Then I have a bunch of misc. items. I am going to assume that an external flash is used a lot? I do not have that but I could easily purchase it.

    As far as my editing skills go. I have done a lot of exposure blending and a lot of editing in general. If i take my time with an image I can really make sure I hit all of the needed details.

    I guess my main question is how should I start going about this? How should I make first contact and how could I start to get some clients? I do not have a website showcasing my work, however, I could definitely get one up and running.

    Thanks for any help!

    submitted by /u/dand06
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    A poll for real estate photographers who shoot 40+ houses a month

    Posted: 14 Jan 2021 03:45 AM PST

    I'm a real estate senior journalist.

    My team and I are conducting research for our next publication. I'll tell the publication name after getting a sufficient number of responses.

    Which of the below things do you find most challenging? Please give them a score from 1 to 5.

    1 being the easiest and 5 being the toughest.

    A - finding new clients
    B - removing color casts quickly
    C - fixing horizontal and vertical lines quickly
    D - Finding free Lightroom presets

    You can post your answers like this

    A5, b5, c3, d1

    submitted by /u/maybevaibhav
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