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>> No.2078492 [View]
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2078492

>>2078467
"I don't really know anything about professional photography technique, so I can't say much on what one should expect to work everywhere.

However, what I've picked up over the past 1.5 years of this shit is:
-Steady the camera as much as possible. My luck with tripods has been mixed, but this could just be bad personal luck.

-Make the room as dark as physically possible. I try to have the CRT I'm photographing to be the only real light source in the room.

-As low of an ISO as possible to minimize noise. Mine will do anywhere from 64 to 1600, but even with normal photography anything higher than 400 is shit. The great majority of my newer photos(last 8 months maybe?) are taken at 100, but 64 seems to be able to get better results at times.

-If you can manually focus you camera at all, do so. My point'n'shoot allows my to focus the shot and have it show on the viewer before actually taking it which helps immensely. Certainly troublesome captures can take 10+ focusing attempts before one actually gets it correctly.

-You optimally want a low exposure time so as to only get a single field of video. My best shots seem to be at 1/16, but this is anecdotal at best. I think this may be tied to the ISO I'm using on this camera, which is why the lower ISO helps.
"
Really curious what /p/ would have to say on this.

Also, I forgot to mention in >>2078445 ; That's RGB from the N64, no amp, just the raw signal coming out of the VDC-NUS A run directly to the multi-out.

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