You can find the EXIF data on an in-camera image or pull it from an image loaded to a computer. This information can be found in a digital image's EXIF Data.
Post your shot settings (shutter speed, aperture, camera type, and lens used) whenever possible.
Snapseed online photo editor how to#
It's totally fine to post a photo and ask about issues you're having or how to correct specific technical issues. If you intend to post or link to your photo:ĪSK A SPECIFIC, RELEVANT QUESTION TO START A DISCUSSION Do not just post to show off your shot or ask for general tips, thoughts or critique. We are not a source for your research- No surveys or requests for info from the users/readers to help flesh out your course, website, program, blog, etc. You may post individual images (under certain conditions), but please don't post links to your album or gallery of images. Post it here in its entirety or not at all. you can write it out here as a standalone post, but don't create a new post that links to your "helpful" content. If you have helpful tips, an article or blog you wrote, etc. The idea is to make the sub itself a source for info, not turn it into a bunch of posts that link to outside content. Visit ITAP to show off the cool photo you took that you're really excited about. Please go to r/BeginnerPhotoCritique and post your image if you're looking for "Thoughts," "Tips," "Feedback," "Opinions," "Comments" or "Critique/Criticism" for your photo. Keep it in-sub: No new threads with links to your content. The place to write original instructional or helpful content/tips/tricks about learning photography. The place to ask the how-to questions you're afraid to ask in other subs for fear of looking clueless or getting flamed. Every day is "stupid question day." What r/Beginning_Photography is: Correspondingly, the rules here are pretty broad. Photography is a broad art/science with lots of details to learn. If your questions concern photography, it's fine.
let's do our best to share our experience with people who are also just picking up their first camera.
We all had to pick up a camera for the first time at some point. R/Beginning_Photography Wiki- Start here for helpful "Where do I start?" info, FAQs, etc. A sub where the total photo-newb can ask questions, learn how to improve, and make that cool new camera do what you want it to.