The type of lighting that should be used for taking pictures of spider bites is camera flash. The flash on a camera will be sufficient to take a picture of spider bite.
Camera Labs recommends a different lens depending on what type of pictures one is taking. The Sony Alpha lens should be used for general purpose pictures and low lighting photography. The recommend a telephoto lens for sports and a macro lens for close up photography. One when is taking pictures of landscapes or big objects they should use a wile-ablge lens.
If you are taking pictures in a room with low light, the pictures will turn out worse. Pictures with good lighting come out better. Many cameras have different settings that allow you to take better pictures in low lights conditions.
It really depends on what you are taking pictures of. If you are taking pictures of flowers, perhaps you want a camera that captures the colors correctly. Or if you are taking pictures of birds, you should look into how a camera captures motion.
The shutter speed setting when taking sprint pictures should be on 'moving' speed. Sprinting is a motion and you cannot take 'still' pictures while someone is sprinting.
Yes, anyone can be photographer, but their success will be based on the quality of their pictures. Taking lots of pictures from different angles, using different lighting, etc. will help you learn and take better and better pictures.
Peter Parker was on a school field trip with his science class. While taking pictures of genetically enhanced Spiders- he comes to find that there is one missing. Later, he is bitten by the spider on the hand and transforms into the newly pronounced superhero.
It's all about the lighting. I find that my pictures best turn out when I take them outside, when it's sunny out. At night time, or inside, or anywhere dark, pictures won't turn out as good. You can put your picture onto your computer (if your camera is digital) and mess with the lighting on photoshop, but it doesn't always turn out still.
What kind of pictures? Where?
Peter Parker was on a school field trip with his science class. While taking pictures of genetically enhanced spiders- he comes to find that there is one missing. Later, he is bitten by the spider on the hand and transforms into the newly pronounced superhero.
No unless you were robbing it or you see them again taking pictures.
No, taking pictures of a TV will not mess up a camera.
If you're using actual film instead of a digital camera, it might be possible to do this in the darkroom, but I'm not positive how well that would work.The best solution is to gel (put a color filter on) the lights before taking the picture, or use a lens filter on the camera. Alternatively, you could use a film specially designed for taking pictures under the type of lighting you're using.If you're using a filter, it will probably be called a color or temperature correction filter. If your pictures are coming out too orange, you probably want a full CTB (the person you buy the filter from should know what that means). You might want to take some pictures with you and get a recommendation.