Sunday, December 13, 2009

Best camera for hiding blemishes? Which is the best camera to make you look your best?

I've owned 3 cameras.. I remembr Kodak was pretty good, Canon was OK and Olympus was pretty bad it showed blemishes the most.





Opinions on cameras? Or even software to remove blemishes?Best camera for hiding blemishes? Which is the best camera to make you look your best?
The best free software that I've come across is the gimp. It doesn't matter what camera you have but I recommend Canon just because they are well known for picture quality and good flashes. Here is the link to download the gimp. As for learning how to use it, just google ';gimp tutorial'; on youtube and click on the video that shows you how to remove blemishes. Very easy. Zoom in on your blemish and all you do is hold down Ctrl and click what area you wanna clone to use over the blemish. Then click the area you want to fix.


Here's the link: http://www.gimp.org/downloads/Best camera for hiding blemishes? Which is the best camera to make you look your best?
OK, try this to make your blemishes disappear....





Get a decent 35mm camera, load it with B%26amp;W film and shoot through a red (R25) filter. Watch those blemished blend right into a normal skin tone (as the red filter will block that color)





As for digital, shoot in normal color mode, import into photoshop and delete green and cyan channel leaving the red channel and you'll get similar efffect
It's not the camera so much as lighting. If you use several lights, 'softer' lighting blemishes are not as noticeable. If you cover the lens with a nylon stocking you can cover lots of blemishes (but the pictures are less sharp--which is the idea).





The flash brings out all the blemishes and pores in skin because the light is 'bluer'. In the old film days we used to cover the flash with a handkerchief to 'soften' the lighting, meaning that lighting arrived at the subject from a wider area.





The best camera for not seeing blemishes is the cheapest camera, the one with the least resolution and sharpness! But that's not what you want.





You can deal with these better in software than in the camera. The previous answerer mentioned GIMP, and it is really good. And FREE. Fixing blemishes with this software is actually not very hard.
try sony


also, use picasa by google - free download
The better you can see your blemishes, the better the camera is. If you really want to look good, use an editing software like photoshop. if you are a newbie, try photoshop elements.

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