pelo que li a 6500 n deve safar-se a fazer bokehs.
So memo tentando com um zoom elevado e afastando-nos bastante mas mm assim. N se pode ter tudo
Hi,
I'm a newbie so pardon me if i sound silly. I had my heart on the S6500fd after reading all the reviews and the comments on this post. I trooped down to the camera shop today armed with my credit card
and tried it out for myself.
I'm trying to get a good prosumer that will give a good protrait shoot with blurred background (or bokeh as some say it). In the shop, I've tried to capture a few protrait shots of my son with S6500fd on manual mode and set the apeture to as low as possible to get the blur background (around F2.9) but still don't find the effect as good as my friend's canon 350d. Did i do anything wrong?
Seeing what a friendly batch this post had, can anyone share their S6500fd pic on what i was hoping to achieve? I was hoping that someone out there recommend me a prosumer camera that will be able to take protrait with the sharp focus on the child and out of focus for the background? So far I've tried the Fuji S6500, S8000, Canon S5 but the blurred effect on these models is not enough for me. I really liked the effect on my friend's canon 350d
Thanks folks if you can give any pointers!
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Prosumer cameras can't achieve the nice bokeh effect attainable on DSLR (.e.g. Canon 350D) because prosumer cameras have much small image sensor and thus use a much shorter focal length for the same field of view.
For e.g. the actual focal length for a DSLR is 50mm-85mm for a portrait or half body shot from about 2.5m away while it's only about 15mm for a prosumer for the same shot at the same distance away.
At 15mm actual focal length, the background is usually quite well defined for most lenses.
The only way you may have a better bokeh effect for portrait shots on a prosumer camera is to use a longer focal length such as above 40mm (which is 180-240mm equivalent field of view on the 35mm format), depending on the image sensor size on the prosumer camera) then shoot from much further away (such as 10m-15m).
In addition, use the biggest aperture available and make sure the background is very much further back.
Nevertheless, can't expect much of the bokeh for a picture taken by a prosumer camera.
EDIT: ja agora esse efeito pode-se conseguir atraves de edicoes por software nao?