Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - The photos taken in the photo basin are rather blurred.

The photos taken in the photo basin are rather blurred.

Hello, I also use a Canon 60D camera ... From your photos, the problem is very serious. It can be said that cameras and lenses have not played their due roles at all. If photos are used for online shopping, they are basically useless (to be honest, I don't mind).

This problem may be caused by:

First, this photo is obviously overexposed, resulting in the basic loss of details of the model and clothing, and the color is definitely distorted (compare the color of the clothing itself). It is suggested that when taking pictures in the shed, the camera should use the "M" manual gear and the ISO should be fixed at 100. Pay attention to adjust the appropriate aperture and shutter to shoot.

Second, the camera or lens is out of focus. Although 60D has nine cross focus points, the most accurate focus point is still the center focus point. Try to focus with this point, and the focus position can be selected above the model. It is best to set the lens to the "AF" autofocus file, and do not use the manual focus file before mastering the camera.

Third, the lens aperture or camera shutter setting is unreasonable. Each lens has a maximum aperture and a minimum aperture, but they are not the best imaging apertures, that is, when the lens is set to the maximum aperture and the minimum aperture, the imaging quality will decrease obviously. As far as your lens is concerned, F4-F5.6 is the maximum aperture and the minimum aperture is F22-F32 (these two values correspond to the focal lengths of 17mm and 85mm respectively), so it is best to use F8-f11+0 aperture for tent shooting. Shutter speed is easy to understand. If the shutter speed is low, it is easy to fake (you can judge whether the shutter speed is too low just by looking at your photos). It should be noted that the tripod must be used for clothing shooting in the shed, and the hand-cranked camera is not reliable, because there is no direct sunlight indoors, and the light intensity is much lower than that outside.

Fourth, the lens of the camera has no hood or uses cheap UV lens, which causes the lens to reflect light and the photo to turn white. Pay attention to whether there is strong light directly entering the lens where the photo is taken, and this light source should be removed.

The above points are the most likely reasons for your blurred photos. In addition, there are some problems in white balance and photographic lighting. In short, the technical reasons for your blurred photos are definitely greater than the equipment reasons. You need to take more photos and constantly find and solve problems to improve. If you still don't understand, please ask-