Monday 16th January 7:47 am
Shot info....
size 6.4mb
dimensions 5184 x 3456
iso = 100
shot 3/5 sec. f/11 50mm
device Canon EOS 700D
, Monday 16th January 11:13am....3 and a half hours to fit the entire front end, motor, suspension, panels...wow..
size 7.7mb
dimensions 5184 x 3456
**** 1/8 sec f 3.5 18mm
iso 100
device canon EOS 700D
What are details of your pics, you will be able to compare and see if they are set settings or if the camera is on full auto.
OK, I haven't got my car yet, so I can't compare. Lets compare the photos anyway:
- Both have the same dimensions 5184 x 3456
- Both have an ISO 100 (that's too low for indoors, but that's just the standard ISO)
- Both are a Canon EOS 700D camera (low end consumer DSLR camera)
- The 50mm and 18mm is how wide the shot would be, so the bottom shot is a wider angled shot
- The f11 and the f3.5 is the aperture - the f11 is a small aperture which means there was plenty of light (small aperature to allow less light) with a large depth of field (ie: so your car in the top shot is all in focus, even though the white car in front is out of focus, or out of the depth of field), and the f3.5 is a large aperture which means there was low light (large aperture to allow more light) with a small depth of field (ie: so your car in the bottom shot is less in focus from front to rear, and all other cars behind will be blurry)
- The 3/5 sec and 1/8 sec is the shutter speed - the higher the number the quicker the shot and the less blurry it would be - so 1/250th is a fast shutter speed (and there are faster)
So at a guess it would be set on an automatic setting, not a fixed focus, to allow the right amount of light for the shot. If the car is moving ever so slightly on the bottom shot then it be more blurry at a slow shutter speed of 1/8 sec. The minimum should be 1 / ISO or 1/100 in the photos you have. As an extreme example if the shutter speed is 1/2 sec the shutter would be open longer, so if the car moves whilst it is open, then it would be more blurry than what it is in the pic, even if the car was in focus to begin with. The camera is a 700D (consumer level), then it steps up to a 70D (semi-amateur level), a 7D (amateur level), a 5D (professional amateur level; this is what I have), and a 1D (full professional level) - and a couple of hundred models in between. I'm no professional, trust me.
I hope this explains it to all - apologies for the long explanation. Ask zero to post what he has to compare.