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Low Earth Orbit
Lighting & Electrical
Favorite LED Pars
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<blockquote data-quote="Tim Weaver" data-source="post: 55337" data-attributes="member: 317"><p>Re: Favorite LED Pars</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Be carful with this line of thinking. By nature camera's can "amplify" the light you see in the image. Therefor all of the pics of led pars you see on the web have to be taken with a grain of salt. I'm sure that that stage was plenty bright, but at the same time those colors are blowing out, so what did it really look like? Were there fingers of brite light and a bunch of shadows? Was it a nice even wash? We don't know and we can't tell because we are relying on a digital image that has been amplified to the point of clipping.</p><p></p><p>None of this is the fault of the picture taker. The camera does this all on it's own unless you are in full manual mode, and the iphone does not do full manual.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tim Weaver, post: 55337, member: 317"] Re: Favorite LED Pars Be carful with this line of thinking. By nature camera's can "amplify" the light you see in the image. Therefor all of the pics of led pars you see on the web have to be taken with a grain of salt. I'm sure that that stage was plenty bright, but at the same time those colors are blowing out, so what did it really look like? Were there fingers of brite light and a bunch of shadows? Was it a nice even wash? We don't know and we can't tell because we are relying on a digital image that has been amplified to the point of clipping. None of this is the fault of the picture taker. The camera does this all on it's own unless you are in full manual mode, and the iphone does not do full manual. [/QUOTE]
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