Talk to an eye doctor if your infection is giving you blurred vision in one eye (or both). It could mean you need to treat the problem with medicine. Less commonly, a dangerous eye infection likeinfectious keratitisorendophthalmitiswill cause one-sided blurriness. People may be at higher risk...
Auras shouldn't be confused withocular migraines, a rare condition that can causea blind spotor temporary blindness in one eye. READ MORE:Blurry vision and headaches Contact lenses There's more than one waycontactscan make your vision blurry: They're dirty and need to be cleaned. They (or ...
The indoor portrait seems to be focussed on her sweater, her face looks shaky but I can`t say that I was impressed with the cheap 40mm F2 prime when I tried one for much the same reason, anything which wasn`t in focus was petty messy especially at close range .. ...
Photographers often leave their cameras set to an auto AF-area mode – one that tells the camera to decide automatically what part of the picture should be in focus. Most of the time, modern cameras are pretty good at this, particularly if the subject is prominent in the frame. However, ...
If I'm understanding technique #4 correctly (where you parent the Gobo to the surface, instead of the light), you would need one Gobo per surface, right? So a wall and a floor would each have their own Gobo. As I mentioned in a reply below, I found that short focal lengths ...
If I'm understanding technique #4 correctly (where you parent the Gobo to the surface, instead of the light), you would need one Gobo per surface, right? So a wall and a floor would each have their own Gobo. As I mentioned in a reply below, I found that short focal lengths g...
If I'm understanding technique #4 correctly (where you parent the Gobo to the surface, instead of the light), you would need one Gobo per surface, right? So a wall and a floor would each have their own Gobo. As I mentioned in a reply below, I found that short focal lengths g...
If I'm understanding technique #4 correctly (where you parent the Gobo to the surface, instead of the light), you would need one Gobo per surface, right? So a wall and a floor would each have their own Gobo. As I mentioned in a reply below, I found that short focal lengths g...
If I'm understanding technique #4 correctly (where you parent the Gobo to the surface, instead of the light), you would need one Gobo per surface, right? So a wall and a floor would each have their own Gobo. As I mentioned in a reply below, I found that short focal lengths g...
If I'm understanding technique #4 correctly (where you parent the Gobo to the surface, instead of the light), you would need one Gobo per surface, right? So a wall and a floor would each have their own Gobo. As I mentioned in a reply below, I found that short focal lengths g...