While going through this site and all the photo's is there a way see to see the cameras settings when the picture was taken. It would help me understand the critique given and why it happened.
While going through this site and all the photo's is there a way see to see the cameras settings when the picture was taken. It would help me understand the critique given and why it happened.
What you need is an EXIF viewer. I use this one http://www.opanda.com/en/iexif/.
There are others as well just Google to find one that suits your operating software.
N.B. Not everyone posts their photos with EXIF data intact (either purposely or accidentally) depends on how they PP and save images.
Cheers
John
Last edited by Wobbles; 31-05-2011 at 11:31pm.
Hi, yes there is. You can go to the properties of a photo and look at the eXif properties...
Right mouse click the photo you want to get the info from and click on properties...
instruct1.jpg
Click on Details
instruct2.jpg
And you should see the EXif details of the photos...
instruct3.jpg
Keep scrolling down for more info...
Some people on the forum remove the info before uploading so then you can't see it but a lot of the photos still have it and if you right mouse click and save a photo (as opposed to copying it), you can view the Exif if it hasn't bee removed.
Hope this helps. Regards Don
Last edited by Doninoz; 31-05-2011 at 11:53pm.
DON - Teachable, always learning, always experimenting, just want to know everything I can about photography!
If memory serves me correctly, you have a Nikon??
If so, then if you're also using ViewNX(v2 is better!!) then over on the far RHS column under the 'Metadata' tab, you will see 90% of the relevant camera settings.
If you can't see this RHS column for both editing Adjustments and Metadata, you probably have a small arrow at the edge of the screen. Click the arrow to open out the column.
The Metadata tab is always open by default, and you have to manually click on the Adjustments tab to open it up as well.
For really detailed viewing of exif data, an exif viewer is the best way to go.
Opanda is good, but I now prefer to use PhotoMe(last beta version). At least they can be had for free.
use google chrome and install the exif viewer add on https://chrome.google.com/webstore/d...kndck?hl=en-US
when ever you mouse over any image it reads the exif data and displays it over the image
firefox has one as well https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/fir...n/exif-viewer/
Ben
Camera: 7d
Lenses: Canon 17 - 55 f2.8, Canon 85mm f1.8, Sigma 30mm f1.4
Flash: 430 exii