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My son's first shots with his OM40

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OlyMan

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Great start. Now is the time to become the film guru.
 
It looks like you got just the right camera for him. I know he is going to be in your Zuiko lens bag soon!
 
He's quite pleased with the results but a little bit disappointed with the saturation and colors. But the light up here in Northern England is pretty shocking during December->February: the sun is really low, and the options are either (a) really harsh light with deep strong shadows (on the rare occasions in winter when when we actually get cloudless skies) or (b) the kind of dull washed-out dreariness you see on these photos on the cloudy days.
 
Teach him Sunny 16 for the rest of the world and Sunny 11 for the British Isles and teach him to set the camera on manual.
 
He's quite pleased with the results but a little bit disappointed with the saturation and colors.
Some of this might be due to the scans.
And you could probably turn that into a teaching opportunity - seek out good light, and those colour opportunities (Christmas decorations?) that are colourful.
The thing that I noticed right away was how well he has taken to manual focus. Tell him "bravo" from me.
 
The thing that I noticed right away was how well he has taken to manual focus. Tell him "bravo" from me.
Yeah I was expecting a few blurry shots but to be honest even on the remaining 4-5 shots that he's decided not to upload, there aren't any real duffers.
 
He's quite pleased with the results but a little bit disappointed with the saturation and colors. But the light up here in Northern England is pretty shocking during December->February: the sun is really low, and the options are either (a) really harsh light with deep strong shadows (on the rare occasions in winter when when we actually get cloudless skies) or (b) the kind of dull washed-out dreariness you see on these photos on the cloudy days.

yup its tough work out there at the minute!

polariser not help?
 
polariser not help?
Would help with the colors probably but up here would definitely drop pretty much every shot into tripod territory. Of course another option instead of a tripod would be 400ISO film
 
Well I have seen a whole lot worse with a person new to pho0tography. It is a very good start.
 
Teach him Sunny 16 for the rest of the world and Sunny 11 for the British Isles and teach him to set the camera on manual.

its a bit too tricky for sunny 11 at the minute - we have fog rolling in, lots of broken cloud where it can be half way bright one minute then dark again the next and one freak day when bizarrely it was 1/15th f2.8 iso 400 at midday for an hour or so and all street lights were on. Bit too tricky to be learning manual in dead of a temperamental British winter!
 
Here's the lad at work, captured with my 35RC:

Dead Link Removed
 
its a bit too tricky for sunny 11 at the minute - we have fog rolling in, lots of broken cloud where it can be half way bright one minute then dark again the next and one freak day when bizarrely it was 1/15th f2.8 iso 400 at midday for an hour or so and all street lights were on. Bit too tricky to be learning manual in dead of a temperamental British winter!
Get one of these https://www.ebay.co.uk/sch/i.html?_...pod.TRS0&_nkw=manfrotto+3216+monopod&_sacat=0 or the UK equivalent of a Manfrotto 3216 monopod, no head needed. It will tame those dim days to 1/2 second shutter speed.
 
Looks as though he's off to a good beginning! Funny, that first shot of a trail and a bench looks like something taken on a trail right near me -- but since it appears the Atlantic Ocean is between us, I guess it wasn't! :D
 
Shots all in focus and properly exposed? That's a win.

Color is going to be dull because colors this time of year are dull...get him a tripod and have fun with some long exposures at night. Those look amazing on film.
 
Looks as though he's off to a good beginning! Funny, that first shot of a trail and a bench looks like something taken on a trail right near me -- but since it appears the Atlantic Ocean is between us, I guess it wasn't! :D
LOL! Yeah I guess it proves there's only a finite number of photo opportunities with a bench sat on a grassy trail before at least two of them start to look alike.
 
Shots all in focus and properly exposed? That's a win.

Color is going to be dull because colors this time of year are dull...get him a tripod and have fun with some long exposures at night. Those look amazing on film.
Yeah I've been thinking of teaching him how to do long-exposure night shots, such as headlight trails from a busy twisty road. Bit clichéd but nearly always looks good. And the benefit of having a DSLR in the house is it makes such an excellent practice-tool for such techniques because the results are instant, so less wasted shots on the real camera.
 
Yeah I've been thinking of teaching him how to do long-exposure night shots, such as headlight trails from a busy twisty road. Bit clichéd but nearly always looks good. And the benefit of having a DSLR in the house is it makes such an excellent practice-tool for such techniques because the results are instant, so less wasted shots on the real camera.

Don't worry about cliche. Getting those headlights on film is really cool, has a very different look than digital. In my opinion any bright light looks cooler on film, it sorta glows. It's far more flat looking on digital. Film makes it look laser like? Light sabery? Can't really explain it.
 
Don't worry about cliche. Getting those headlights on film is really cool, has a very different look than digital. In my opinion any bright light looks cooler on film, it sorta glows. It's far more flat looking on digital. Film makes it look laser like? Light sabery? Can't really explain it.
I know exactly what you mean.
 
Hehe, the "real" camera. I like that. Well, he's off to a solid good start. Personally I don't find his pics lacking in color, despite the overcast conditions. You can always teach him the magic of bumping up saturation in your image processing software, too. :cool:
 
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