muduck18
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Geigertown, PA
depth isnt based on colors, its based on light. since he was shooting aperture priority with a PRIME 50mm lens with the ability to drop down to an aperture of f/1.8, there should be some sort of depth of field in the shots, and there isnt at all. more than likely he was shooting at a high f/stop which forced the camera into a slower shutter speed (and the 50mm normal lenses are not as good in the higher f/stop ranges- they excel, and even the purpose of a straight 50 is the extremely low f/stop), letting in too much light, and coupled with the auto white balance in the snow and the overcast skies makes for an very flat image. the ISO800 also doesnt help.
shooting at a lower f/stop and quicker shutter speed would let in less light, and define the shadows much better rather than turning them all to washed out darks.
Thank you for the lesson sir..
However, you seem to have missed a crucial point. Light is color, especially when dealing with photography. or more accurately color is light in different wave forms, so, changing the light, changes the color depth, making the image appear flat.
Reading material?
http://www.fi.edu/color/
and since most of us here at

word.